Lot 674
  • 674

Tang Zhigang

Estimate
90,000 - 120,000 HKD
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Description

  • Tang Zhigang
  • Horse
  • gouache on paper
signed in Pinyin and dated 96, framed

Literature

Meeting in Painting: Tang Zhigang, Hanart TZ Gallery, Hong Kong, 2004, p. 34

Condition

There is a small circular tear to the lower left of the work; there are creases and minor tears throughout the surface, which are inherent to the medium of the work. Otherwise, the work is in satisfactory condition. Framed under perspex and not examined out of frame.
"In response to your inquiry, we are pleased to provide you with a general report of the condition of the property described above. Since we are not professional conservators or restorers, we urge you to consult with a restorer or conservator of your choice who will be better able to provide a detailed, professional report. Prospective buyers should inspect each lot to satisfy themselves as to condition and must understand that any stat.mes nt made by Replica Shoes 's is merely a subjective, qualified opinion. Prospective buyers should also refer to any Important Notices regarding this sale, which are printed in the Sale Catalogue.
NOTWITHSTANDING THIS REPORT OR ANY DISCUSSIONS CONCERNING A LOT, ALL LOTS ARE OFFERED AND SOLD AS IS" IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONDITIONS OF BUSINESS PRINTED IN THE SALE CATALOGUE."

Catalogue Note

Born in 1959 to an army family in the most southwestern province of China, Yunnan, Tang Zhigang's vast oeuvre reveals a truly unique development and maturation as an artist. Tang's paintings are indicative of his experience as a youth during the Cultural Revolution, as a soldier in the People's Liberation Army, which he joined in 1976, as well as a citizen or 'non-soldier' upon his subsequent departure from the army. While his more recent 'children in meeting' paintings are very well-received in the art world, they are the culmination of an artist's personal journey into his past and childhood memories. The past plays an inextricable role in the understanding of Tang's work: as a child, he loved to paint, and when he joined the PLA, he chose to participate extensively the propaganda department, until his resignation in 1996. Tang received his artistic training from the department of oil painting at the People's Liberation Art Institute, graduating in 1989.  At that t.mes , art had a purely utilitarian purpose: the proliferation of Communist ideals and principles. Tang's long career as an artist has seen many reinventions of his style, especially surrounding the period of his resignation from the PLA, a t.mes of transition for the artist to finally reexamine the various influences, whether political or personal, on his art and formulate his own voice. Replica Shoes 's is pleased to be offering two works from this period in Tang's early career, Horse (Lot 674) and Horses (Lot 675), in the autumn theme sale.

Unseen in his later works, the deeply personal iconography of the horse, as well as the quite apparent sexual references made in these paintings, allude to a distinctly strange collects ion of memories in Tang's mind, a collects ion of memories which will eventually allow him to conceive his famous 'meeting' paintings. In 1965, while his father was fighting in a war, Tang lived with his mother at a labor farm in Kunyang, where she was a prison warden. He recounts: 'in the 1970s, we had a daily broadcast, "the main task of pupils is to study at school, accompanied by the development of other interests," there were so many problems at the school...children at the labor farm spend most of the t.mes at home to "develop other interests" such as fishing, catching shrimps...the most interesting thing was to watch cows or horses mate.' The innocent curiosity of a child is revisited in these gouache on paper works; simple, yet loaded with visual references to the sexual energy inherent in both humans and animals. Despite the overtly erotic imagery, these works maintain a naïveté and sense of wonder which permeates beyond simple notions of sexuality.  Tang, himself, once said: 'One of the features of Kunyang town was the popular use of carts, a major means of transportation at that t.mes . One could easily detect the smell of horses in the city. Carts from the farm were quite different from those in the city. Our horses, which were of good breed, were much stronger and bigger. They like to expose their sexual organ. I would use a catapult to strike it with a bamboo strip. They would then withdraw it immediately.' In this recollects ion, the horse becomes the champion, the symbol of masculinity and the vital element which allows contact between the country and the city.

The notion of 'seeing' as a child or 'child's play' continues to be a prominent theme in Tang's oeuvre today. Ironically, despite leaving the army, his works continue to address subjects which are inherently derived from the strictly Chinese experience of military life. These two important works mark the beginning of Tang's departure from pure depiction of the lives of soldiers to the truly compelling subject of personal memory and history. Acting as a precursor to his iconic 'children in meeting' paintings, Horse and Horses demonstrate the task and trial that one must undertake to revive those precious, often forgotten instances of childhood. However, the intrinsic power of Tang's work stems from much deeper and farther than just his individual experience, it originates from a collects ive memory which exists the minds of many Chinese people of his generation. The ability to use personal memory as a template for collects ive memory allows Tang's paintings to strike a distinctly 'Chinese' chord.