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Tuesday, September 16, 2025 |
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Yue Minjun and the Symbolic Smile Opens at Queens Museum of Art |
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Yue Minjun, Musician, 2003, Oil on canvas, 100 x 80 cm. Private Collection, New York.
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QUEENS, NY.- Yue Minjuns first museum show in the U.S. will open at the Queens Museum of Art on October 14, 2007. One of the self-styled, Beijing-based artists who emerged in the early 1990s, Yue Minjun has since gained international recognition. Yue Minjun has successfully parlayed his iconic smiling self-portrait into his signature motif, and is widely considered a pioneering figure in Chinese contemporary art. Yues laughing faces are at once exuberant and eerie. Placed against various recognizable backdrops, the tirelessly optimistic faces compel the viewer to question the larger social context portrayed in each painting.
Yue Minjun began his career as a founding member of the Cynical Realism school. This group emerged in the early 1990s, in the wake of the Tiananmen Square incident and the subsequent crackdown on artistic freedom imposed by the Chinese government. From the founding of the PRC in 1949, through the decade long Cultural Revolution that ended in 1976 with the death of Chairman Mao Zedong, art was solely created to promote Communist Party ideology. All of Chinas artistic production was framed by a system of government-imposed directives.
In the current art world, Yue Minjun and his renowned contemporaries, including artists Zhang Xiaogang and Fang Lijun, are making artworks that reflect a social consciousness relevant to Chinas changing political and economic climate. Chinas avant-garde artists, many of whom are based in Beijings booming art scene, enjoy a surprising degree of creative liberty in utilizing parody and critique to comment on the state of their country. The attention these artists have received from the West also makes them less vulnerable to censorship by the central government.
Yue Minjuns laughing faces convey the paradox of present-day China. The jubilant expressions depicted on the hearty faces of cloned figures make us wonder about the reality under the toothsome smile. The backgrounds depicted, from a stoic Tiananmen Square to a teeming nuclear mushroom cloud, also allude to the shifting realities of contemporary China. The seemingly cheerful demeanor of these figures suggests an attempt to cope with the countrys complexities. Yue Minjuns work begs the question: what is truly joyful?
The key to decoding these enigmatic portrayals may lie in the rich cultural tradition that has influenced this artist from the Mainland. Yues laughing faces recall the Buddha of the Future, a welcoming figure located at the entrance of countless Buddhist temples throughout China. While his beaming faces bespeak contemporary concerns, they also implore an optimistic future.
Yue Minjun and the Symbolic Smile at the Queens Museum of Art will include bronze and polychrome sculptures, paintings and drawings and will be on view from October 14, 2007-January 6, 2008. The show will be accompanied by a smaller-scale exhibition of the artists watercolors entitled, YUE MINJUN I Love Laughing, at the Asia Society. The 6 watercolors that present a softer side of the artists oeuvre will be on display at the Asia Society in New York City June 18, 2007 through January 2, 2008.
The Queens Museum of art is housed in the New York City Building, which is owned by the City of New York. With the assistance of the Queens Borough President Helen Marshall and the New York City Council, the Museum is supported in part by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York State Legislature. Major funding is also provided by corporate and foundation supporters, QMAs Board of Directors and members.
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