We are proud to announce the opening of Boers-Li Gallery’s outpost in New York City. This expansion of our Beijing-based gallery is in accord with our vision to introduce our artists to a broader audience. We are located in a landmarked townhouse on the Upper East Side of Manhattan, within walking distance of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum. The gallery’s new branch will present works from our veteran artists, and, at the same time, develop new programs in collaboration with international artists outside of China.
The inaugural exhibition of Boers-Li New York Gallery, Uncharted Waters, showcases both established and emerging Chinese artists including Zhang Peili, Zhao Gang, Zhang Hongtu, Zhang Wei, Ma Kelu, Lin Yilin, Fang Lu, and Miao Ying, all of whom have lived or are still living in New York City. Their diverse artistic practices characterize the evolution of Chinese contemporary art from the early eighties to today. From painting to video, installation, performance, and digital network technology, the group show proposes an alternate perspective on the multi-layered history of Chinese contemporary art, and reflects on the transformative relationship between the individual and the cultural context. The eight artists explore and (re)define their perspectives on the social, political and cultural circumstances which impinged on them and the work they made in New York. In such a context, a wall may be a metaphor or it may be an actual physical barrier. The exhibit registers performativity as the artistic strategy through which the artists found and still find ways to surmount perceived barriers and express themselves freely.
Rooted in their historical contexts, the works on view reveal how the exigencies of the artists’ experience of cultural dislocation resulted in their reworking the performative dimension of their practice. The abstract visual language and the brush strokes in the works of Zhang Wei and Ma Kelu trace Chinese as well as western expressionistic painting, and they are incised by the thoughts and emotions of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The architectural motifs in works of the same era by Zhao Gang and Zhang Hongtu articulate an ambivalent relation to social circumstances, and thus a political undertone is rendered on the picture plane. Most evocatively, Zhang Peili’s performance and installation piece, Scenic Spot Opened Temporarily (1995), will be reenacted at the gallery. Zhang builds a physical wall of thousands of newspapers behind which he sits insistently tearing the newspaper into pieces. In Lin Yilin’s My Imagination of A Great Nation (2001), the artist surmounts the barrier; the work documents his performance of swimming in the air between a concrete wall. To evoke the mentality of the technological age, Fang Lu’s video works, My Classmates (2005) and Cinema (2013), simulate real-life experience through filming protagonists whose barriers are the technological ones between people. Miao Ying transforms images which the State’s firewall keeps from being circulated or freely consumed.
For more than 10 years, Boers-Li Gallery has been introducing Chinese artists of different generations of the country’s short history of contemporary art. We mount exhibitions at our Beijing gallery and participate in various international art fairs, such as Frieze New York and Frieze Masters, Art Basel in Switzerland and in Hong Kong, and regional fairs in Shanghai, Taipei and Singapore. The program of Boers-Li Gallery seeks to open dialogues between the different stages of Chinese contemporary art: the "underground" period of No Name Group and Star Group from the 1970s, the Beijing Abstract Movement from the early 1980s, the '85 New Wave Movement, the New Media Movement in the 1990s, as well as the younger generations: the so-called “Millennials” and "Post-Internet."