Jiang Jie (Chinese: 姜杰; born in 1965), a Chinese artist and lecturer of sculpture studio in Central Academy of Fine Arts. She graduated from Beijing Industrial Art Institute in July 1984, majoring in Non-Traditional Machining; and she started working in the sculpture creation studio in Central Academy of Fine Arts after graduation from CAFA in July 1991, with a Sculpture major.

Jiang Jie
Born1965 (age 58–59)
NationalityChinese
EducationBeijing Industrial Art Institute
Central Academy of Fine Arts
Known forSculpture
Installation Art

Artistic practice

edit

The themes of Jiang Jie's sculpture works reveal the instinct of humanistic care.[1] She uses flowing sculpture lines to bring viewers imaginary space, highlighting a female perspective investigating the world. At the same time, her works point to weakness and fragility as well as the contradiction and tension of life.[2] Her work is usually microscopic and psychological, even in large sculptural and installation works, which are derived from her observation towards the vulnerability and decay of life existence.[3]

Jiang Jie's works have been characterized as introducing sculpture language into the field of installation.[4] Another artistic indication that has been developed throughout her art-making is the theme of hope upon first impression, would usually turn out to be tragic atmosphere.[4] Her use of infants is said to be inspired by Jiang Jie's sympathy, as she uses "mystery, vulnerability, softness, wetness, sensitivity and desolation" in infants' bodies to indicate the loneliness and fragility of adults.[4]

Representative artworks

edit

Fragile Products (1994) (《易碎的制品》

edit

Similar to The Appearance of Life (1994), infants are also a theme in Fragile Products (1994) and the vulnerability of human beings. She expresses vulnerability in order to reveal the cruelty of life. Jiang Jie used moist and fragile wax to make infants with broken arms and legs that are slightly larger than the real sizes of babies. In an exhibition of the work she piled up 50 duplicated infants of three different poses, and put them into a sheet of thin film plastic six meters long and five meters wide. Because the corners and sides of the thin film were hung vertically, 50 shattered infants were inevitably squeezed and bumped into each other in a state of disorder.[4]

The piece bridges the relationship between adult society and the world of children, as well as the relationship between soul and objects.[5] It refers to the "fragility" of an infant or a person. At that time, Chinese feminist art criticism had not yet been fully realized, but Jiang Jie's works were classified as representing a kind of contemporary sculpture rather than Chinese feminist sculpture. After post-modernism spread in Chinese art circles, Jiang Jie's series of works had a stable relationship with feminism.[4][5]

Parallel Men and Women (1996) (《平行男女》)

edit

Still working with infants,[4] in this work the infants were used as products of a conceptual change by the use of duplication on the basis of sculpture, to the use of ready-made children-like models. Jiang Jie used wax and gauze layers on the two childlike models which look the same and show no gender characteristics. She also reshaped their bones, muscles and gender organs, and placed the couple horizontally on the base in a position that their heads and legs are facing toward each other. Since the original childlike models' color and the shape of legs still somehow remained, people could still see the commercial image from them. Plus, with the traces of wrapped medical gauze, the whole piece became closer to audiences.[4] The characteristic of soluble wax further enhanced the ambiguous sense.[4]

Approaching (1995) (《接近》)

edit

Composed of 28 wax infant models, this work included nets that were made of transparent silk and silk thread, the 28 infants were divided into several groups doing the same poses---as trying to approach each other with hands and faces up. The piece demonstrated that even if it's deliberate to get close to each other, they still couldn't really get close enough. The silk net that pulled by transparent silk thread in the air, which looks like a spider web, as well as the virtual scene under the lights both added a lot to this kind of absent-minded state and psychedelic atmosphere. Getting close to each other purposely would directly result in collision in the further step.[4]

Exhibitions

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ a b 张, 文志 (2014-11-28). "姜杰:雕塑创作中的崇高与公共性". Art Express. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  2. ^ "Jiang Jie: Things Smaller Than You….. (姜杰:小于你的......)". Oriental Art (东方艺术) (15). 2010. ISSN 1005-9733. Retrieved 2019-03-09 – via China Academic Journals Full-text Database CNKI.
  3. ^ CAFA INFO. "姜杰". CAFA INFO. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i 王, 南溟 (1998). "对脆弱的诅咒:姜杰的艺术表达". Art Circles(艺术界). Retrieved 2019-03-09.
  5. ^ a b 尹, 吉男 (2016). "姜杰的艺术:"幸福"及其问题". 美术研究. ISSN 0461-6855. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  6. ^ "Agreed to the Date 26 Nov.1994 as a Reason , Conceptual Collaboration Work with Artists from Hangzhou-Shanghai-Beijing". Shangh Art Gallery (香格纳画廊). 1995. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  7. ^ "45 Degrees as a Reason , Conceptual Collaboration Work Organized by Geng Jianyi with Artists from Hangzhou-Shanghai-Beijing". Shangh Art Gallery (香格纳画廊). 1995. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  8. ^ 杨, 晶 (2016-01-19). ""中国当代艺术年鉴2014"提名艺术家姜杰 作品《大于一吨半》". 北京文艺网. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  9. ^ CAFA ART INFO. "姜杰:雕塑创作中的崇高与公共性——从《大于一吨半》谈起". CAFA ART INFO. Retrieved 2019-03-10.
  10. ^ 姜, 杰 (2012-10-08). "姜杰:敞开的艺术". ART CHINA. Retrieved 2019-03-10.