Zhang Xiaotao

Zhang Xiaotao (born 1970 in Hechuan, Chongqing, China), is a Chinese painter based in Beijing and Chengdu.

Zhang Xiaotao
Born1970 (age 4950)

He graduated from the Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Academy of Fine Arts in 1996. He then became a teacher in the Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu and this lasted from 1996 to 2009. In 2010 Xiaotao taught in the New Media Department of the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute. Now he lives and works in Beijing and Chongqing.

Zhang makes paintings with sexual imagery often involving small animals such as frogs and snakes,[1] and incorporating images of putrefaction and pollution.[2]

His work Condom Series: Enlarged Props – Crystal And Fishes 2 sold for US$64,500 at Sotheby's Hong Kong in 2007. [3]

Updated May 27,2018 Biography

Zhang Xiaotao 张小涛 (b.1970, Hechuan, Chonqing, China)

Zhang Xiaotao was born in Hechuan, Chongqing, China in 1970 and graduated from the Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute in 1996. In 2011, he co-founded the New Media Department of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute where he works as a Professor, and master's degree supervisor. In 2016, he completed his Phd thesis at Beijing's Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, with Xu Bing as his Phd adviser. He lives and works in Beijing

Zhang Xiaotao's artworks are exhibited widely, both domestically and internationally, including the 55th Venice Biennale (2013), Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, the 6th Moscow Biennale (2015), Prague Biennial, Guangzhou Triennial, Chengdu Biennial, Shenzhen & Hong Kong Bi-city Biennale of Urbanism\Architecture, Shenzhen Independent Animation Biennial, Holland Film Festival, Tokyo International Animation Fair, Asia Animation Contest, London Saatchi Gallery, Museum of Art for the XXI Century, Luzern Art Museum, Albright Knox Gallery, John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Florida Valencia Museum of Modern Arts, Bologna Museum of Modern Arts, Vienna Essl Museum, Centre d’Art Santa Mònica, Norway 3.14 Foundation, National Museum of Contemporary Art Korea, Seoul Museum of Art, Shanghai Art Museum, Chengdu Contemporary Art Museum, Guangdong Art Museum, He Xiangning Art Museum, Suzhou Jinji Lake Art Museum, Arthur M.Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeology at Peking University.

He is one of the active and outstanding cross-media artists in neo-painting and new media experimental animation in China's contemporary art. He is one of the directors of the 1st Shenzhen Biennial of Independent Animation. He always focuses on the torment and struggle of our souls that lies behind China's legendary modernization. This is a unique experience with both hope and destruction which is very complicated in China. He uses cross-media to concerns about the paradox between social change and personal spiritual history and attempts to convert the personal experiences into public experiences. The concept of epidemiology is both pathological and sociological, both individual and social. Each generation faces a different predicament, and he hopes to present these complex epidemiological reports. The Director of the 7th and 8th Kassel Documenta, the famous German Critics Manfred Schneckenburger considered him as a marvelous artist because of his research approach of infinitesimal narration.

Feature Documentaries were recorded by NHK Japan in 2004. He was awarded of the Prize of Young Artist 2008. The Italian Magazine Flash Art had an exclusive interview with him on the animation film Mist. Feature Documentaries were recorded by CCTV. He was awarded of the Best Technique Award in Asia 2011 and 2012. He had an exclusive interview with New York Times (international version) in Jan. 2016 – Nostalgia and Surrealism: The Modern China of Animation Artist Zhang Xiaotao. His works have been collected by museums, foundations, art centers and collectors at home and abroad.

Painting style

Xiaotao uses sexually explicit material in his works for a subtle yet explosive effect. Xiaotao belongs to a generation of Chinese artists that have been able to paint with much freedom. Xiaotao's use of pattern and decorative elements in his work enhance the power of the painting's obscenity and political subtext. Xiaotao combines conceptual and political features in his work while portraying a delicate irony as well.

"Joyful Time" display

This display took place in Oakland, California at the Pacific Bridge Gallery.

Zhang Xiaotao's "A Joyful Time," displays huge oil and watercolor paintings inviting viewers into a bright underwater world of copulating frogs and intertwined human forms, the reaction "elated and free" may come to mind. In the display amphibious creatures float unencumbered in washes of blue, green, and orange paint, with their outlines making whimsical, eye-pleasing shapes. Perhaps this is a reflection of Xiaotao's background. Xiaotao nearly drowned as a child and is afraid of water and he comes from a country whose reproductive policies are heavy-handed and punitive.

In Zhang's opinion, oil paint is made to reflect the character of an ancient culture while embracing modern themes and colors. Fish, snakes, human faces, beer mugs, and condoms are repeating elements used by Xiaotao which appear in intricate layers of paint that defy opacity. The creatures' hues are often the blues and greens of the traditional Chinese pottery and carvings that can be found in jade markets, but placed in front of or behind the animals' outlines are shapes and symbols that would challenge, if not startle, any unsuspecting market regular.

In more than one painting, a pair of frogs hug blissfully, doggie-style. They are free-falling, not anchored to anything except each other-getting ready, perhaps, for their parachutes to open. On one canvas, they look skyward against a backdrop of floating clouds. On another surface, their background is a motif of human couplings taken from an ancient Chinese "pillow book" of how-to positions for adults.

The repetitiveness of the pillow-book images evokes pop art. But where Andy Warhol used a checkerboard of soup cans or Marilyn's head, here the repeated element is always erotic: trios and couples in sexual play, sprinkled lightly across the backdrop. They make the canvas, from a distance, look like a textile, like a bed sheet.

While pop artists of the '50s and '60s were paying homage to postwar consumerism and icons of mass-production, China was still in the throes of the Cultural Revolution. But here Zhang turns to his artistic predecessors and, as if making up for lost time, incorporates their method. Even the vibrant sheen that some of his paintings seem to give off is reminiscent of silk screening, a mass-production technique that Warhol adopted in the early 1960s.

Some of the largest works, at the back of the gallery, are also the most provocative. In dark gray-green hazes float huge, rubbery shapes. They are transparent sheaths with reservoir tips, and faces peer from behind, or inside. Tiny bubbles are suspended within the wrinkled tubes, and here and there a splattered dollop of red paint contrasts with the green. The faces glisten as if behind a windowpane, and their wide-eyed constraint elicits sadness.

Everywhere in Zhang's work one finds splotches of the red paint. It appears to be mixed with something that won't quite blend with it, and the effect is that of a potato stamp made from a bumpy, many-eyed spud. In the context of sex and birth, though, these bubbles and deep-red blotches are semen and blood. They are the repeating threads of humanity: liquids that transmit life, inheritance, and the most essential fluids of ancestry-containing not only DNA, but also the ways in which we (both animals and humans) need each other and hurt each other. In their aqueous environment, the drops, smears, and splotches also remind one of amoebas seen under a microscope, like beads of a primordial sea.

The sensation of water is hard to shake. The oil paint itself has a liquid quality-it has been thinned enough to resemble watercolour from a short distance -and layered images often appear soaked, suspended, or dripped on. Zhang's frequently recurring dreams about drowning presumably account for all the water imagery in his work; his preoccupation stems from two swimming accidents when he was seven years old: one happened at the shore of the powerful Yangtze River, where he was playing with his companions. His brother's friend had pulled him into the current, teasingly, but soon lost control and had to swim ashore. Zhang remained out in the water and was almost dead before an adult who could brave the current came to his rescue. That tentative, struggling moment between life and death informs the artist's work expansively. His watery paint-strokes summon additional, related junctures of mortal existence: the point between conception and life, the limbo between death and afterlife, the suspension of time during coital climax.

If every one of Zhang's paintings, as he claims, is a glimpse into his dreams about drowning, then it would seem his nightmares have faded over time and produced aesthetic remnants. Yet new demons, universal ones, have popped out of his work while he processed his fears. The underwater trauma that transformed itself into beauty via paint and repetition reinvents itself here with new sociological and psychological overtones. Something new is displacing his original memories, overlaying passion upon experience, and revealing the intersection of childhood and adulthood.

Awards

2012 The Best Technology Award of Asian Youth Animation Contest 2012, Guiyang, China 2011 The Best Technology Award of Asian Youth Animation Contest 2011, Guiyang, China 2010 Nomination of Reshaping History: China Art 2000-2009, Beijing, China 2009 Prize of Excellent Works of Chongqing Youth Art Biennial, Chongqing, China 2008 Young Artists Award of 2nd Critics Annual Exhibition, Beijing, China 1996 1st Prize of Mei Yuan Cup, Lu Xun Academy of Fine Arts, Shenyang, China

Solo exhibitions

2016 Zhang Xiaotao: The Spring of Huangjueping, Pékin Fine Arts, Beijing, China 2014 Worlds of the Trichiliocosm,Wilfrid Israel Asian Art Museum, Wilfrid, Israel

    In The Realm of Microcosmic, Pekin Fine Arts(Beijing),Beijing,China
    Plum Flower Patterns, white box art center,Beijing,China
    Empty Shadow,Jin Ji Hu art, Museum,Suzhou, China

2013 Transition,Museum Of Contemporary Art Chengdu ,Chengdu ,China 2012 Spiritual Encoding, Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts, Taipei, China 2011 Sakya, White Box Museum of Art, Beijing, China 2010 Epidemiology,Guangdong Museum of Art,Guangzhou,China 2008 Microscopic Narration,Iberia Center for Contemporary Art,Beijing,China 2007 Rebirth, Arthur M.Sackler Museum of Art and Archaeologyof Beijing University, Beijing, China

    Desires without Limits, Dolores de Sierra Galería de Arte, Madrid, Spain
    Night, Shanghai e-Arts, Shanghai, China

2006 Beautiful Imbroglio, He Xiangning Art Museum, Shenzhen, China 2005 Dreamscapes, International Art Foundation 3.14 Bergen, Norway

    Dream Factory · Rubbish Heap, Tokyo Gallery, Japan
    Dreamscapes, M.K.Ciulionis Nat. Museum of Art, Kaunas, Lithuania

2004 Dream Factory﹒Rubbish Heap, Beijing Tokyo Art Projects, China 2003 Materialistic Decay, Akie Aricchi Art Contemporary Gallery, Paris, France 2002 Desire, Kunst Akademie Muenster, Germany 2001 zhang Xiaotao solo exhibition, Tokyo Gallery, Japan 2000 Fabricated Images, Pacific Bridge Gallery,Oakland,U.S.A

Group exhibitions

2015

Point to Asia- 6th Moscow Biennale of Contemporary Art, Moscow, Russia Chinese Contemporary Art Invitational Exhibition 2015, Ming Yuan Art Gallery, Shanghai, China Chang Jiang International Image Biennale, Chang Jiang Art & Culture Club, Chongqing, China Asian Media Art Festival, Art Gallery of Chung-Ang University, Soul, Korea New Era – Created in China, Arhus Kunstmuseum, Aarhus, Denmark

2014

Liquid Culture- China & Korea New Media Art Exhibition, Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea The Visible and The Invisible- Video and Photography from China Today, John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Florida, USA Echo – Multidimensional Traditions of Chinese Contemporary Art Exhibition, Hamburg Art Museum, Hamburg, Germany Translated Concussion—Chinese New Media Art Techniques and Practice since 2000,MOCA,Chengdu,China


2013

China Pavilion at the 55th Venice Biennale, Arsenal, Venice, Italy Pure Views: New Painting from China, St. Monica Arts Center, Barcelona, Spain

2012

Chinese animation since the 1930S,7th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art, Queensland Art Gallery, Queensland, Australia Holland International Animation Film Festival, Holland Animation Film Foundation, Amsterdam, the Netherlands Roaming the World—Zhang xiaotao and Pierre Exhibition, Chengdu Contemporary Art Museum, Chengdu, China Inward Gazes—Performance Art Documenta of China 2012, Macao Art Museum, Macao, China

2011

Mountains and Rivers – Speechless Poem, Berne Art Museum, Berne, Switzerland New Age: Australia-China International New Media Arts Exhibition, QUT Art Museum,Australia Relationship: New Chinese Construction Art, Museum of Art for the XXI Century, Rome, Italy

2010

Material and Code: Disciplinary Crossings of Cinema Studies and New Media, Chicago University, Chicago, USA Beijing Time, Santiago de Compostela, Santiago, Spain Heart—Forefront of Contemporary Architecture in China Exhibition, Vitra Design Museum, Weimar, Germany Arena: A Post Boom in Beijing, Hazelhurst Regional Gallery & Arts Centre, Hazelhurst, Australia The Big Bang, White Rabbit Museum, Sydney, Australia Pure Views: China New paintings, Louise Blouin Foundation, London, UK

2009

Beijing Time, Casa Asia Matadero Madrid, Madrid, Spain Ink Not Ink—Chinese Contemporary Ink Painting Exhibition, Drexel University Art Museum, Philadelphia, USA Contemporary Art Rebirth of China, Palazzo Reale Museum, Milan, Italy

2008

55 Days in Valencia, Valencia Museum of Modern Art, Valencia, Spain Transgressive Body, TAPE Art Center, Berlin, Germany The Revolution Continues, Saatchi Gallery, London, UK Poetic Realism—A Reinterpretation to South of Yangtze River, Francisco Tomásy Valiente Art Center, Madrid, Spain

2007

Starting From Southwest, Guangdong Art Museum, Guangzhou, China Chinese Whisper, Osage kwun tong, Hong Kong New Painting from Southwest China, K gallery, Chengdu, China From New Figurative image to New Painting, Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, China 3 Langue 3 Colors, UM Gallery, Seoul, Korean 3rd Guiyang Art Biennale, Guiyang Art Museum, Guizhou, China The Art of Seduction—From Schiele to Warhol, Minoritenkloster Tulln, Austria

2006

Jiang Hu, Jack Tilton Gallery, New York City Skin, Shenzhen Art Museum, Shenzhen

Internal injuries, Marella arte contemporanea, Beijing Poetic Realism : A reinterpretation of Jiangnan, RCM Art Museum, Nanjing Enchanting Images of a Changing World, Vienna Essl Museum, Austria Unclear and Cleamess, Heyri Art Foundation, Korean The Road map of Painting 2, Beijing Tokyo Art Projects Beijing Varied Images, Shanghai art museum

2005

China Contemporary painting, Fondazione Carisbo, Italy 2nd Prague Biennial, Prague, National Gallery Veletrzni Palac, Prague 2nd Triennial of Chinese Arts, Nanjing Art Museum Nanjing 2nd Chengdu Biennial, the Modern Art Museum, Chengdu Young Chinese Contemporary art, Hangar-7, Austria China Contemporary Painting, APalazzo Bricherasio, Torino, Italy

2004

Forbidden Senses ? – Sensuality In Contemporary Chinese Art Espace Culturel François Mitterrand, Périgueux, France China Today Painting “ ---Infeld-Haus der Kulturen, Vienna, Austria China's photographic painting, China Art seasons, Beijing Officina Asia, Galleria d’Arte Modema. Bologna, Italy New Perspectives in Chinese Painting, Marella arte contemporanea, Milano, Italy Artificial Happiness “ RMIT Museum Melbourne, Australia Live in Chengdu, Shenzhen Art Museum, Shenzhen

2003

left hand -right Hand, 798 Space Beijing Composite picture of Asian, Hong Kong Art Museum Image of image, Shenzhen Art Museum. Shenzhen Illusory, Museun63, Hong Kong. Guangdong art Museum links between two points, Tokyo gallery Japan

2002

Dream, Chinese contemporary Art. CAC. Manchester

Korean Contemporary Art Festival. Seoul Art Center Korean

Triennial of Chinese Arts, Guangzhou Art Museum Beijing Afloat, Beijing Tokyo Art Projects Beijing

2001

Up-Down-Right-Left, -the Feminism etc., the Modern Art Museum, Chengdu Dream, Chinese contemporary art, Atlantic's Gallery, London Youth in transition, He xiangning Art Museum Shenzhen

2000

Time of Reviving, 2000 Contemporary Art Exhibition of China, Upriver Gallery, Chengdu Between the Dreams and the Picturesque Meaning, Vienna Between 1900 And 2000, Schloss Cappenberg, Deutschland

1999

'99 Academic Exhibition, Upriver Gallery, Chengdu, China

1997

Urban Personality and Contemporary Art, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu, China

1996

Personal Experience Show, Art Museum of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, Chongqing, China

Selected exhibitions

2007
  • Three Languages Three Colors, UM Gallery, Korea
2006
  • Jiang Hu, Jack Tilton Gallery, New York, U.S.A.
  • Unclear and Cleanness, Heyri Art Foundation, Korea
  • Beautiful Imbroglio, He Xiang Ning Art Museum, Shenzhen, China (solo)
2005
  • Dreamscapes, Foundation3, 14 Bergen, Norway (solo)
  • Dream Factory - Rubbish heap, Tokyo Gallery, Japan (solo)
  • 2nd Prague Biennial, Prague, National Gallery Veletrzni Palac, Prague, Czech Republic
  • 2nd Triennial of Chinese Arts, Nanjing Art Museum, Nanjing, China
2004
  • Officinal Asia, Galleria d’Arte Modema, Bologna, Italy
  • New Perspectives in Chinese Painting, Marella arte contemporanea, Milan, Italy
2003
  • Materialistic Decay, Gallery Akie Aricchi Art Contemporary, Paris, France (solo)
2002
  • Desire, Kunstakademie Muenster, Germany (solo)
  • Triennial of Chinese Arts, Guangzhou Art Museum, China
2001
  • Flowers in the dream, Tokyo Gallery, Japan (solo)
2000
  • Joyful Time, Gallery Akie Aricchi Art Contemporary, Paris, France (solo)
  • Fabricated Images, Pacific Bridge Gallery, Oakland, U.S.A (solo)
  • Joyful Time, Gallery Hartmann, Munich, Germany (solo)

Individual pieces of work

  • Xiaotao's painting titled "Enlarged prop - Bird," which is a dreamy looking painting of an emaciated looking bird attempting to feed or analyzing some sort of nest looking thing. Xiaotao emphasises lose detail here which invokes the dreamy feel. This painting is estimated to be priced around US$250,000.
  • Another painting called "Fictioned Images No. 2" by Xiaotao, which is priced in the range of US$100,000, is a painting of a man looking through a glass mug. The glass mug distorts the man's face as he analyzes the glass. This painting also has Xiaotao's signature red splotches.
  • Xiaotao's painting named "Crystal Condom" shows a yellow and a purple condom almost floating in the air in front of a blue background. This painting's price is estimated to be worth about US$85,000.

References

  1. Coleman, S, Zhang Xiao Tao, from AsiaArtNow.com Archived April 23, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  2. Franklin, J, An Entropic Vision Archived September 2, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Shine Art Space Archived March 1, 2014, at the Wayback Machine, Shanghai
  3. Auction results from AskArt.com
  • Wang, Sue. "Zhang Xiaotao". Cafa Art Info. Retrieved Aug 28, 2011.
  • Article by Feng Boyi on Zhang Xiaotao
  • Images, biography and texts about Zhang Xiaotao from the Saatchi Gallery
  • by Kristianna Bertelsen on Zhang Xiaotao
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