Exhibitions

Invalid Signature Order
11 January 2023 – 3 February 2023
Jack Bell Gallery, London, UK
 
The exhibition presents new series of work on canvas by Zhong Wei during Beijing’s pandemic control, a sharp-cut lockdown imposed during 2022, where the unpredictable mandatory isolation caused panic on food and daily necessities under such short notice. Invalid Order Signature documented the mixed emotions of the artist during social suspension and how he responses to stress and grief through his creative practice by sourcing fragments from digital culture while deconstructing memes, images, and videos found online and convert them into imagined landscapes, figures, and entities. His loud and complex visual language questioned the power of authority in real life events and how it could influence information on the internet.

Stress Response

24 November 2021 – 17 December 2021

Jack Bell Gallery, London, UK

 
Zhong Wei’s loud and chaotic visual language references the overwhelming omnipresence of the Internet. Sourcing imagery from vast range of memes, images and videos found online, Wei deconstructs the textures of digital culture and reanimates the fragments into imagined landscapes, figures, and entities. This will be his first exhibition in the UK.
省電模式 [■□□□]· phone died
15 May 2021 – 2 July 2021
de Sarthe Hong Kong, China
 
The exhibition features a new series of works on canvas as well as a large-scale installation that contemplates modes of communication in times of social sterility and 21st century, post-Covid-19 angst. 
 
Alien-like organic forms and fragmented compositions are recurring motifs in Zhong Wei’s artworks. Sourcing his imagery from the dynamic and vivid visual language of Internet culture, Zhong Wei digitally collages select elements into complexly layered compositions before transferring his creations onto canvas via acrylic, archival pigment print, and/or silkscreen.
Zhong Wei’s practice draws inspiration from a vast range of subjects, particularly contemporary culture and its ever-changing forms. His most recent body of work incorporates new narratives that reflect upon his own fruitless and exhausted efforts against the pandemic, as well as a lingering uncertainty and anxiety caused by the current state of social standstill.
 
His large-scale multimedia installation Forget sits in the center of the gallery space. At the core of the installation, a pulsating organ-like sculpture is housed inside a steel structure with transparent PVC curtains. Wire, tubes, and cables extend outwards from underneath the sculpture. Light emanating from their syncronized pulse is revealed through partially removed floor boards, visually reminiscent of circulatory veins and arteries that lie under the surface of our skin.
 
The cold and sterile aesthetic of Forget is a representation of the mechanical systems that facilitate the exchange of information in our current technological era. The installation’s biomorphic characteristics, however, are the artist’s comment on what these systems signify in a time of social suspense. As civilization is ushered indoors by the fear of infection, the lines of communication that tunnel beneath the city serve as extensions of the body, imbued with vitality amidst the gradually decaying surface.

Void Loop

18 September 2020 – 18 October 2020

Plate Space, Beijing, China

 
Zhong Wei’s multimedia installation Forget is currently on view in his solo exhibition Void Loop at Plate Space, Beijing. Composed of wires, rubber tubing, aluminum, and LED lights, the artwork resembles a parasitic alien or a partially exposed spaceship camouflaged behind a rusted urban facade. The flashing and color-shifting LED lights evoke both fascination and anxiety, a tone that is consistent throughout Zhong Wei’s creative practice.

Illusive Particles

August 22 – September 21, 2020

MadeIn Gallery, Shanghai, China 

“Illusive Particles” is MadeIn Gallery’s first exhibition after its relocation at Shanghai One Museum Place, opening on August 22nd, 2020. The exhibition reflects on the current digital ecosystem and visual language.

Contemporary Show Off
4 July 2020 – 11 July 2020
de Sarthe Hong Kong, China
 
de Sarthe is pleased to announce Contemporary Show Off, a one-week-long showcase of new and existing monumental artwork from our roster of contemporary artists. Several of the paintings in the exhibition are the largest artworks our artists have ever produced. We asked seven of our artists to either create new work or choose one of their most impressive existing pieces. The exhibition is the result of this collective effort and embodies the communal spirit of our gallery, the quality of our artists, and the boundary pushing nature of our program.
易变 ░ 耦态°∶Nёメㄒ 乚ěVéし
28 September 2019 – 16 November 2019
de Sarthe Hong Kong, China
 
Featuring a new series of paintings and an immersive installation, the exhibition explores the ripples of the information explosion and the consequential loss of existential substance, a side effect of our indulgence of modern advancements. 
 
Our current informational environment has grown beyond the perceptive capabilities of humans. Images, videos, and graphics are now inherently embedded within every corner of an expanding online universe, the amount of which is seemingly endless. As both contributors and users, our individual roles are infinitesimal in its macro overview, and we could spend countless hours attempting to discover its entire extent. Yet, through the motion of what the artist describes as “coupling”, it is our very interaction with these innumerable factors — in all their unpredictable variations — that generates the energy that drives its exponential evolution.
 
Comprised of appropriated imagery digitally compounded with organic forms, Zhong Wei’s paintings barely remain within the confines of their surface. As popular Internet icons manifest left and right, the uninhibited and near apocalyptic chaos portrayed within each composition consumes its canvas with monstrous momentum. The artist’s vivid use of color fills the surrounding environment with vitality and tingling anticipation. Paradoxically, the artworks evoke both excitement and anxiety and through this Zhong comments on the human fascination of pursuing the infinite despite getting lost within it.
 
The volatile and contingent nature of his subject means that Zhong Wei works across various mediums. In Zhong’s installation Heap, two lines of PVC curtains form a bubble within the gallery space. In contrast with the clean, clinical exterior of the curtains, the obscured interior houses a mound of scattered wires, concrete, plastic and miscellaneous electrical components with Zhong’s paintings piled amongst them. Borrowing the raw and industrial overtones of the basic building blocks that constitute most man-made creations, Heap illumines the fundamental source and root of technological and information civilization. 
 
By elucidating its origin, Zhong hopes to raise questions regarding its end. The development of technology and the Internet has become self-driven and is rapidly accelerating. Its newfound metabolism is achieved though the perpetual replacement of itself, opting for accumulation over refinement. In 易变 ░ 耦态°∶Nёメㄒ 乚ěVéし, Zhong speculates the metaphysical implications of the technological era and our hand in its making. By recording the shapes and textures of man-made visual phenomena, he attempts to capture the scenery of our current digital-cultural landscape.