Yin Zhaohui

Zhaohui, Yin





Yin Zhaohui was born 1977 BirthHenan, China.
Lives and works in HomeBeijing.

Categories: Painting

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Documents of modern & contemporary art.

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Selected works at the Saatchi Gallery.

For Yin Zhaohui, photography is synonymous with consumer culture: its representation supplants the ‘real’ with an economy of image-ideals, establishing a ‘normalcy’ of perception based on degeneration and distance. Working from photographs rather than from life models, Yin appropriates photography’s mechanical aesthetics to emphasise and heighten this estrangement. In his paintings of the body, Yin concentrates on distinctly human features — such as the hands and face — to disrupt this system of expectation. Devices such as greyscale palette, forced lighting effects, and areas of intensified or diffused focus reinforce an unnatural perception of these intimate details, creating a jarring sense of the uncanny.

Rendered with clinical austerity, Yin’s Untitled (Fingers), on first glance, appears as an abstraction of cylindrical forms – like an Escher-esque pile of sausages – implausibly entwined, weirdly seductive and repulsive with their organic suggestion. The image is of course, a large ‘close up’ of hands. Inspired by John Coplan’s Self Portrait Fingers, a series of work where Coplan photographed his own hands in a variety of sexually evocative positions, Yin’s paintings construe the intrinsically human as something alien and dead. Yin executes this painting with a slick pop veneer, framing his inanimate appendages in the language of commodity fetishism.

Picturing a cropped detail of a distorted face Yin’s Untitled (Face) is unnerving because it disrupts the most fundamental feature of identity. Quite literally construing ‘disfigurement’ as a schism between the personalised body and its external discernment, the colouring disperses from life-like at the centred nose to an unnatural waxen grey towards the canvas’s edges, a reference to flash bulb lighting and metaphor for private and public consciousness. Through Yin’s flat graphic style of painting and subtle tonal gradations, Untitled (Face) offers a multi-layered enigma of perspective, both in its formal composition and cultural associations.
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James Rosenquist. Painting Below Zero: Notes on a Life in Art.
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Casa 5 Tavira, Portugal. artist and art © the-artists.org 1998 - 2009