BACKForeword II — Introspection: Between Seeing and Be Seen | OuYangJangHe
The representation of time and space in an artwork and their embedded congruity between the
viewer’s heart and eye has always been a critical quality of intellectual identity in traditional
China. However, such variables have been transformed onto two-dimensional representations in
the contemporary era, for which time has been compressed to codes. Especially with dominating
interventions of the Internet, DV and other media, image has become a channel of information to
identifying the self. In other words, the representation and physicality from the overflow of time
and space have been rudimentarily replaced virtually. Throughout this evolutionary process of
identity-awareness, what has taken place in the field of artistic creativity? I think it’s not sufficient
to only point out the changes taking place in the visible self-reflections and the changes in aesthetic
mentalities, perhaps, more profound changes are unfolding on the act of seeing.
Among various
phases of He Sen’s artistic practice, viewing as a variable, has had
considerable
paradoxical qualities. Among his earlier works, the portrayed objects embodied vivid pre-historical
impression seemed to gather together or dispersing to fossils left remarkable impression on the
viewers. In the ensuing period, the young girls in his paintings had both degrees of cruelty and
fragility under their highlighted surface, the high-tech polished gaze are frigid, manipulative, and
robotically inhumane. Yet, the sight and response provoked by these works were unquestionably
contemporary imbued with a bodily scent of the quotidian. I noticed that, in these two creative
periods, there is a transitional phase (or period) referring to He Sen’s shut-eye portraits. Is that
referred to being seen? We are aware that the basic premise for the acceptance and wide discussions
on contemporary art is to posit art into various contexts to establish different dialogues. As for
dialogues established through viewing, not only the viewer and the objects are deeply rooted in
dichotomies of history/reality, mind/body, criticism/consent, sometimes, both are also blindingly
inlaid by the act of viewing. Such blindness is unnamable, cannot be ignored and is destined.
Because,
under the premise of predisposed theological structure of dialogue, as the
viewer looks at
a contemporary artwork, the unseen and the unknown of the artwork looks back and gauges at the
viewer. The mysterious gaze of the artwork to the viewer perhaps borrows from a ghostly gaze and
the viewers’ predisposed blindness. Consequently, a more profound viewing of the mind is born: it is
not an act between the viewer and contemporary art, nor is it a metaphor for art and life, or simply
replacement of the reflection of men from a dreamscape context without assigning a physical body.
The multiple refracted relationships shape the way of seeing and being seen – layers both closed and
open, provide interesting viewing samples for the historical progress of Chinese contemporary art.
Seeing and be seen in He Sen’s artworks from his earliest to transitional phases are paradoxical.
And once he channeled this energy into his recent practice, the paradox transformed. Not only the
contemporary figures became the ancient depictions, moreover the quotidian reality became textual
references. Through this transformation, the change in the way of viewing precedes the artist’s
creative concept. Certain secondary mysterious inner force propels one’s second nature (nature of
text) to be adopted into He Sen’s primary nature (reality) of viewing. Ming dynasty painters refer
to such viewings as viewing by the “dynamic eye”, it grants the viewer with both complex and
enlightening impressions: overlapping and antagonizing the vastness of the universe and the enclosed
textual space; furthermore, the pining linear timeline also began to twist. For which, I believe that
He Sen’s recent paintings has a spiritual geometric quality, providing a comfort through simple yet
myriads of interactions. Meanwhile, I also believe, one should allow introspection on He Sen’s recent
paintings, because introspection assists to inner reflection.