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We’re excited to share the announcement of Ziping Wang’s first solo exhibition with Unit London. Entitled “The Other Landscape”, the show will run July 6 to August 2nd and will feature the artist’s fragmented artworks that incorporate Old Master references with pop-cultural symbolism.

The body of work that forms Ziping Wang’s newest solo exhibition, The Other Landscape, continues to explore the artist’s fascination with the modern-day abundance of imagery. In today’s world, we have almost unfettered access to imagery through virtual portals, allowing us to revisit numerous moments and events visually. Equally, whether online or in our day-to-day lives, we are further inundated with commercialized imagery. More often than not, these images are highly modified, specifically designed to be attention-grabbing. Ziping’s vibrantly saturated artworks, comprising layers of fragmented depictions, aim to document and record this profusion of endlessly diverse imagery.

Ziping is most interested in the everyday visuals that most of us would not think to examine closely. In particular, she is persistently drawn to the dynamic colors and designs of food packaging. For the artist, these images encapsulate the motivations of commercialized visuals that are designed to capture our immediate attention. Ziping herself is primarily attracted to intensely saturated colors and patterns, which frequently remind her of her childhood, reminiscent of toys or sweet wrappers. While working on a piece, she often visits grocery stores to test her reactions to certain food packaging, with the wrapper of a familiar childhood snack possibly triggering an important memory. In this way, Ziping’s works invite viewers to form their own personal connections, possibly recognizing these commonplace symbols from their own memories. As such, these paintings tap into the universal, capitalizing on everyday imagery to activate our sensory memories. At the same time, Ziping’s works layer these everyday contemporary images with references to Old Master works, specifically East Asian scroll paintings. The inclusion of these images, which are variants of existing artworks in the public domain, highlights the widespread accessibility of imagery.

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Though she occasionally starts with a digital sketch, Ziping’s process normally takes shape from a selection of images that have spontaneously grabbed her attention. She prints them to create a handmade collage before turning to the canvas. The end result is always fragmented, mirroring the contemporary condition of a whirring and frantic mind. However, every inch of these fragments is treated in the same way, with the same care and attention through a harmonisation of surface texture and paint consistency. The outlines of each fragment are completely clear and crisp as if produced digitally. After finishing one area, Ziping does not revisit it, almost mimicking the process of a printer to replicate the uniformity of a digitally rendered image. As such, the flatness of Ziping’s works is immediately striking as it serves to imitate the flatness of a twodimensional virtual scape. To emphasise this effect, the artist includes areas of grey and white gridding in many of her paintings. Representative of empty digitised space, these grids interrupt and diffuse the brightly coloured imagery that otherwise dominates the picture plane. In this sense, Ziping’s works consciously trick the eye, appearing to be simultaneously digitised and handmade. Composed of these fragments, her canvases reveal and conceal numerous picture planes, interspersing Old Master references with pop cultural iconography to convey the contemporary phenomenon of information overload.

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Born in Shenyang, China, Ziping Wang is a painter living and working in Houston and New York City. She received her BFA degree from Rhode Island School of Design in 2017 and went on to achieve an MFA degree with distinction from Pratt Institute in 2020. She was selected as first place for the juried exhibition with Archway Gallery in Houston, and has exhibited with Winston Wachter Fine Art in New York, Gallery LVS in Seoul, Korea, Gessoisland Artspace in Shenyang, China. Ziping is intrigued by the curated identities caused by overloaded information, so she creates color-saturated paintings that highlight the tangible memories that are embedded in childhood food/objects, and the ambiguous boundary between transcultural identity.

Visit the gallery’s website for more information.