Asia Society Museum in New York presents ‘No Limits: Zao Wou-Ki’

On view September 9, 2016 through January 7, 2017

Asia Society Comms
Asia Society
3 min readJun 30, 2016

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“It is not easy to break free. Everybody is bound by a tradition — I, by two.”
-Zao Wou-Ki, 1964

Zao Wou‐Ki. Pavillon rouge (Red pavilion), 1954. Oil on canvas. 25 1⁄2 × 21 1⁄4 in. (64.8 × 54 cm). Picker Art Gallery, Colgate University, Gift of Dr. Harvey Picker ’36, 1994.2.3. Photography courtesy of Picker Art Gallery, Colgate University

No Limits: Zao Wou-Ki, co-organized by Asia Society Museum and Colby College Museum of Art, is the first retrospective of the work of Zao Wou-Ki (1920–2013) in the United States. The exhibition aims to reintroduce American audiences to the singular achievements of this pioneering Chinese-French artist, who melded eastern and western aesthetic sensibilities in his paintings, as a key figure of the post-World War II abstract expressionist movement.

No Limits: Zao Wou-Ki takes its title from the Chinese meaning of Wou-Ki, “without limitation,” a state of being that the artist embodied through his art. One of the first artists of the Chinese diaspora to achieve international recognition, Zao was born in Beijing and spent his formative years in Shanghai and Hangzhou, where he pursued artistic study at the China Academy of Art. In 1948, he emigrated from Shanghai to Paris, where he was championed by French intellectuals and artists and in subsequent years became a major fixture in the European art world. In the 1950s and 1960s, American museums and private collectors avidly acquired his paintings, and his work was shown in numerous exhibitions including a 1968 solo exhibition at the San Francisco Museum of Art, the last American museum show of Zao’s work until now.

The importance of Zao’s work derives from his singular adaption of visual characteristics of Chinese art within twentieth-century oil-painting idioms. In Zao’s hands, abstraction reflected the encounter between two worlds and embraced both European modernism and Chinese metaphysical principles. His groundbreaking internationalist aesthetic marks him as a key figure of twentieth-century transculturalism.

Zao Wou-Ki. Lune noire (Black moon), 1953. Oil on canvas. 45 × 57 5⁄8 in. (114.3 × 146.4 cm). Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zadok / Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University. Photography courtesy of Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University

No Limits: Zao Wou-Ki comprises 49 works in oil, ink, print, and watercolor, spanning more than six decades and includes loans from major institutions in the United States and in Europe. The exhibition is curated by Melissa Walt and Ankeney Weitz, Colby College Museum of Art, and Michelle Yun, Asia Society Museum. A fully illustrated catalogue, the definitive monograph in English on the artist, accompanies the exhibition. A modified version of the exhibition No: Limits: Zao Wou-Ki will be on view at Colby College Museum of Art in early 2017.

The exhibition is organized into three sections. The first, “Calligraphy is the Starting Point,” shows a transitional moment in Zao’s work during the mid-1950s to mid-1960s. His early mastery of Chinese ink and brush techniques had led him to seek the challenges of painting in oil. But after several years in Paris, he looked back to his formative training as he shaped his artistic voice. “Paradoxically, it is to Paris that I owe my return to my [Chinese] roots,” Zao commented in 1961.

The second section of the exhibition, “To Learn is To Create,” showcases earlier works made between 1945 and 1954, a period in which Zao tapped diverse visual traditions and methods, ranging from European painters such as Paul Cézanne, Marc Chagall, and Paul Klee, to ancient Chinese bronze inscriptions, rubbings from Han-dynasty tomb decorations, and Tang- and Song-dynasty landscape paintings.

The third section, “A Place to Wander,” looks at his mature works across the mediums of oil, ink, and watercolor, painted between 1965 and 2007, that embrace abstraction while exploring landscape, scenery, and the forces of nature.

A number of related programs have been organized to coincide with the exhibition including a half-day symposium on Zao Wou-Ki and the legacy of international postwar abstraction on November 18, a musical exploration by three boundary-crossing artists Jen Shyu, Susie Ibarra, and Samita Sinha on October 1, a series of new feature and short Chinese films on November 3–6, and a family program on December 3.

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Asia Society Comms
Asia Society

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