Ji Zhou: Civilized Landscape

September 10 – October 10, 2015

Ji_Zhou_Maquette_1_Archival_pigment_print_2014

Ji Zhou
Marquette No. 1, 2014
Archival pigment print
43 3/8 x 72 inches (110 x 183 cm)
Edition of 6
 

Ji_Zhou_Maquette_2_Archival_pigment_print_2014

Ji Zhou
Marquette No. 2, 2015
Archival pigment print
59 x 81 1/2 inches (150 x 207 cm)
Edition of 4

Ji_Zhou_Maquette_3_Archival_pigment_print_2014

Ji Zhou
Marquette No. 3, 2014
Archival pigment print
59 x 95 1/4 inches (150 x 242 cm)
Edition of 4

Ji Zhou
Maquette No. 4, 2015
Archival Pigment Print 
43 3/8 x 74 1/4 inches (110 x 189 cm)
Edition of 6

Ji_Zhou_Maquette_5_Archival_pigment_print_2015

Ji Zhou
Marquette No. 5, 2015
Archival pigment print
74 3/8 x 59 inches (189 x 159 cm)
Edition of 4

JI_Zhou_The_Map_2_Archival_pigment_print_2014

Ji Zhou
The Map No. 2, 2014
Archival pigment print
43 3/4 x 59 inches (111 x 150 cm)
Edition of 4

Ji_Zhou_The_Map_3_Archival_pigment_print_2014

Ji Zhou
The Map No. 3, 2014
Archival pigment print
31 1/2 x 68 1/8 inches (80 x 173 cm)
Edition of 6

Ji Zhou
The Map No.4, 2015
Archival Pigment Print 
53 1/2 x 98 3/8 inches (136 x 250 cm)

Ji_Zhou_The_Map_5_Archival_pigment_print_2014

Ji Zhou
The Map No. 5, 2014
Archival pigment print
59 x 54 3/8 inches (150 x 138 cm)
Edition of 4

Ji Zhou
The Map No. 6, 2015
Archival Pigment Print 
36 1/4 x 63 inches (92 x 160 cm)
Edition of 4

Press Release

Klein Sun Gallery is pleased to announce Civilized Landscape, Ji Zhou’s first solo exhibition in the U.S., on view from September 10 through October 10, 2015.

In his multimedia practice, Beijing-based Ji Zhou initiates a critical dialogue between reality, perception, and possibility. Themes from the artist's previous series of photography largely dictate and inspire these new works for Civilized Landscape. For example, in the Dust series (2010), photographs of organized landscapes covered in dust were conceived after a fire in the artist's studio. With the click of his shutter, he framed the still-settling ashes atop domestic objects, creating an image dense with temporal dimensions and fine layers of sediment. Ji Zhou honors the quiet aftermath of the fire, rather than the trauma itself, questioning the obvious forms of composition and documentation. His prior series, Event (2007), examines a similar concept where the artist critiques the genre of documentary photography and the blurred lines separating fiction and nonfiction.

Ji Zhou’s new photographic works for Civilized Landscape further subvert the object as a vehicle for visual representation and interpretation; maps and books become landscapes of possibility. The process tells as much of a story as the final image does: Ji Zhou collects maps, hand-sculpting them into peaks and troughs to mimic mountaintops. He includes books that are assembled into cantilevered towers resembling city skyscrapers. These ‘rural’ and ‘urban’ illusions are then photographed, further augmenting reality. As always, Ji Zhou chooses to question rather than offer his own conclusions: What is civilization – a constructed illusion created by man or an inevitable product of evolution? What is the truly ‘civilized landscape’– tautology or oxymoron? 

Ji Zhou was born in Beijing, China, in 1970. He graduated with an MFA in Plastic Arts from the Pantheon-Sorbonne University in Paris, France, in 2005. His solo exhibitions include “Objectified Spectacle,” Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, China (2013) and “In Situ,” Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China (2008). Group exhibitions include: “The Persistence of Images,” Redtory Art and Culture Organization, Guangzhou, China (2015); “The 9th Shanghai Biennale, Shanghai, China (2013); “Retrospection & Deviation,” Times Art Museum, Beijing, China (2011); "Rendez-vous 09,” Institut d'Art Contemporain de Villeurbanne, Rhône-Alpes, France (2009) and “55 Days in Valencia,” IVAM Centre Julio González, Valencia, Spain (2008).
 
For press inquiries please contact Ysabelle Cheung at the gallery (212.255.4388) or via email at ysabelle@kleinsungallery.com. For all other inquiries, please contact Casey Burry at the gallery (212.255.4388) or via email at casey@kleinsungallery.com.