العنوان: 4/F, Building D7, Yard 3 Jinhang East Road
It is not the first time that Christopher Le Brun, one of the leading British painters celebrated internationally since the 1980s, has entered the contemporary art scene in China. He had already been there in 2019 with an exhibition organized by the Lisson Gallery in Shanghai and again in 2021 with two interventions, at the Red Brick Art Museum and at the MoCAUP. An artist who ranges from figurative to abstract, who fluently engages in various disciplines, painting, sculpture and printing, Le Brun is also a public figure who has held prestigious positions, for example he was president of the Royal Academy of Arts in London from 2011 to 2019. In his new solo exhibition in Beijing he presents Phases of the Moon, a multi-panel painting that reveals the cyclical nature of his practice with a lunar motif that dates back to one of his first oil paintings and Lontano, a triptych that shares the title with a piece by the composer Gyorgy Ligeti written in 1967, which embodies the artist's belief that painting should primarily have a sensual and emotional appeal.
6000 years of ceramic artefacts: from the Mediterranean to Asia
From the first ceramics to the refined porcelain objects of late production made outside China: a journey to get to know closely the points of contact and the differences between the different Eastern civilizations.
On display are 74 series of works created by Qi Baishi. Among these, a 25-page album entitled Flower Drawings found in the Academy's archives, after having been buried in dust for decades, will be shown for the first time.
From the ruins of the contemporary, poetry still rises
The exhibition is an attempt to respond to the tumultuous and unfathomable conditions of the contemporary world, illustrating the deeply rooted conflicts and anxieties of the times in which we live and evoking a hope sparked by individual activism and creativity.
Zhao Gang delves into the fluidity of individual identities, the clash of cultures, and the intricate interplay of fragmented historical events. The exhibition at Lisson Gallery features a new series of paintings by the artist who now lives and works between Beijing and New York.