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Lot 334: Tang Zhigang , b. 1959 Children in meeting oil on canvas

Est: $2,500,000 HKD - $3,500,000 HKDSold:
Sotheby'sHong Kong, ChinaOctober 05, 2008

Item Overview

Description

signed in pinyin and dated 2000.3 ; signed in Chinese and pinyin and dated 2000.3 on the reverse, framed This lot is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity. oil on canvas

Dimensions

measurements note 114.5 by 145.6cm.; 45 1/8 by 57 3/8 in.

Artist or Maker

Exhibited

Provenance

Hong Kong, Hanart TZ Gallery
Acquired directly by the above by the current owner

Notes

PROPERTY OF AN ASIAN COLLECTOR
Born into a military family in 1959, Tang Zhigang experienced an unusual childhood--he grew up at the Kunyang Labor Farm, run by his mother who was a prison warden there. As a result, Tang sees the human condition with open eyes, incorporating into his funny, provocative paintings the sense of both those who are punished and those doing the punishing. Much of his work stems from actual experience; as part of his military duties--Tang spent twenty years in the army, from 1976 to 1996--the artist painted pictures of the soldiers close to the front of hostilities between China and Vietnam. His highly recognizable treatment of public scenes, populated by children in adult uniforms and positions of power, is also the result of experience; one of his jobs was to teach art to the children of military families. It makes sense, then, that Tang would use children as a form of satire, undermining the military's penchant for pomp and endless meetings. Tang's pictures are that much more striking for their inclusion of small children taken up with very adult activities, some of which must stem from Tang's own involvement in the army's propaganda division. The little children, barely older than toddlers, drink tea and sit importantly behind cloth-covered tables. Beyond the patent humor of these renditions of military life, there is something a little dark or troubling. But one might ask, with some degree of justification, why Tang populates his canvases with the images of children at meetings so clearly derived from the experience of adult activities. Does his conceit effectively render a criticism of institutionalized life, or is it an attempt at a comic vision, not without its sharp insights but basically a tribute to the absurdity of life? Somehow there is something deeply serious about Tang's renditions of infants at work; we look upon the incongruities of their actions with a jaundiced eye of our own. The relations, then, between the image-maker and the image, report on the common tendency of people to see not only from an adult point of view but also from a childlike perspective, which allows us to infantilize to some extent the activities Tang registers in his art. Yet, from an institutional point of view, we see Tang's tableaus as serious necessities. The tension between the two outlooks is key to Tang's outlook; indeed, his achievement rests on the gap between the toddler's age and the functions they are portrayed as performing. Given Tang's involvement in the military, a span of two decades, it becomes clear that the particulars of his children's activities ring true as nearly ritualized symbols of adult responsibility. It doesn't matter so much what is being discussed in Tang's paintings, only that the meeting itself is held in proper military style. Tang often populates his pictures with the playthings of children: toy trucks and trains, balls and dogs. This imagery has its origins in earlier work from the mid to later 1990s, when Tang engaged in a series entitled "Adults in Meeting." While the arrangements of adults in the previous group of works often mimics what happens in Tang's later works of art, he sets some distance between his intentions and the use of children--he denies that the use of children allows him to make satirical points without offending authorities. Clearly, Tang's experiences are central to his art, yet his implicit plea for the autonomy of the imagination seems true to our experience of his art. In addition to all the political meaning we load the paintings with, it looks like Tang is given over to whimsy--an attitude that sees play as a natural element of art. Of course, because we tend to see the child as possessed of an innately whimsical imagination, we tend to view paintings incorporating children as inherently light-hearted and good humored. Yet the meetings themselves take on an absurd light because of the children participating in them; there is a tension between the actors and their activities. In Tang's Children in Meeting (Lot 334), we see eight small boys, each dressed in an identical uniform, black shoes, and white socks. The similarity of what they wear is undercut by the very different faces of the children, four of whom sit on covered chairs in the front row and four of whom stand behind them. The boys' heads are much too large for their small bodies, adding a bit of absurdity to the picture's general deviance from the usual. A stick, a ball, and two toy cars litter the red carpet that extends to the painting's foreground. As a practical exercise in illogic, this painting communicates some of the irrational order that prevails in photographic images taken of groups, particularly when the members of the group are representative of the military or other governmental bureaucracy. These small boys wear the clothes of adults, yet their world, as seen in the objects Tang has chosen to portray them with, is resolutely childlike. The social commentary is more than clear: these are boys doing a man's job. Or, conversely, a bureaucracy is only fit for children. In either case, a sense of incongruity prevails, resulting in an entertaining disconnect between the official and the actual.

Auction Details

Contemporary Chinese Art

by
Sotheby's
October 05, 2008, 12:00 PM ChST

5/F One Pacific Place, Hong Kong, Admiralty, -, CN