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Article on Li Yuan-chia by Nicholas Wroe - The Guardian


Nicholas Wroe

Mon 20 Nov 2023 08.00 GMT

Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge is a particularly appropriate venue in which to stage the first major exhibition of work by the 20th-century Chinese artist Li Yuan-chia, and his many friends, collaborators and associates.

The Cambridge gallery was established by collectors Jim and Helen Ede in the late 1950s as a home, a meeting place and also a sort of museum; somewhere people could come to share in artistic practice. Li, meanwhile, was engaged in a similarly idealistic project at his home in the tiny village of Banks, close to Hadrian’s Wall in Cumbria, which for more than a decade from the early 70s operated as the LYC Museum and Art Gallery.

Li’s journey to Banks from south-east China’s Guangxi province began when he was 20. His unique trajectory included periods in Taiwan, joining avant-garde art movements in Bologna and passing through the outer edges of Swinging London before his arrival in Cumbria in 1968. What he set about doing there was equally remarkable. Amy Tobin, co-curator of the new show Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia & Friends, explains how the wide range of art that Li made – conceptual work, painting, textiles, collages, sculpture, photography and more – reflects the breadth of the community he built around artmaking.

“He invited literally hundreds of artists to spend time in Banks or to work or exhibit there,” says Tobin – names included sculptors Andy Goldsworthy and David Nash as well as the composer Delia Derbyshire – “but what was also so innovative at the time was that he was committed to what we now call outreach and access. Maybe a very few museums had rudimentary friends schemes back then, but things like education and community programming really weren’t in place in most UK institutions. And all this was taking place in a collection of crumbling old farm buildings.”

Li invited literally hundreds of artists to spend time with him in Cumbria, including David Nash and Delia Derbyshire

Li acquired the ramshackle property from the painter Winifred Nicholson, of the celebrated artistic family, who was a great friend and whose own work was significantly influenced by Li and his project. Li took on the manual work to refurbish the buildings and shape the grounds and, in concert with colleagues and his radical approach to art and to friendship, he went on to think of LYC as the ultimate expansion of his artistic practice. It was a space for artists to share ideas and responses to the world around them, and to combine traditions of eastern and western thought.

But while LYC was something of a haven for Li and other artists, and he was generally warmly received by his neighbours, there were also difficulties. He faced racism, and – like millions of others in the early 90s – he refused to pay his poll tax. Li was forced to close the museum in 1982 due to problems with money and the building rights, but he continued to live and work at the site until his death 12 years later. Li is buried at Lanercost Priory, near Carlisle.

The new exhibition places his work alongside that of his friends and visitors, plus new commissions by contemporary artists. “In his time, Li was known in the circuit in which he worked, but did not have much wider recognition,” says Tobin. “There’s definitely a story of racialised exclusion around cultural differences that seemed insurmountable to a largely white art world of the time. This show tries to rethink some of those histories by paying more attention to people like Li, organisers as well as artists, and their undoubted social as well as artistic legacy.”

Making New Worlds: Li Yuan-chia & Friends is at Kettle’s Yard, Cambridge

Radical approach: Four key works by Li Yuan-chia

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Photograph: Courtesy of the Li Yuan-chia Foundation

Li Yuan-chia, Untitled, 1994, unique hand-coloured photographic print
This image made in the last year of Li’s life has an exuberance and optimism. Li composed sculptural installations in his garden and constantly augmented them. Capturing this work in tinted snapshots untethers it from any moment in time, and reveals the richness of his creative process.

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Photograph: Courtesy of the Li Yuan-chia Foundation

Li Yuan-chia, Untitled, c.1960, ink on paper
Li drew on, and combined, the principles of Chinese ink painting with western expressionist abstraction, calligraphy, plus an interest in language and exploring the possibilities of expression and meaning.

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Photograph: Courtesy of the Li Yuan-chia Foundation

Li Yuan-chia, Untitled, no date, hand-coloured black and white print
Li was fascinated by photography, often using tints and other effects to transform a reproducible entity into something individual. This image is part of a series made after LYC had closed down, exhibiting a variety of moods and emotions. Here, there is a sense of melancholy in the apparent ruins of his enterprise.

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Photograph: Kieron Boyle/Courtesy of the Li Yuan-chia Foundation/Matthew Hollow

Li Yuan-chia, Untitled, 1970, paint on fabric wall hanging (detail)
Li’s wall hangings, made of hessian, combine many of his artistic preoccupations, in terms of patterns and shapes, with a supreme practicality: they were also used as draft-excluders in chilly Cumbrian farmhouses. He gave many to his local friends; much of his work was made with the intention of giving it away.

This article was amended on 20 November 2023. An earlier version said that Li Yuan-chia is buried “in Carlisle”. This has been clarified to state that Li is buried at Lanercost Priory, which is near Carlisle. The subheading of this article was amended on 22 November 2022 because it referred to “the first major exhibition of [Li Yuan-chia’s] work”. To clarify: an exhibition of his work was held at the Camden Arts Centre in 2001. This exhibition is the first major one to feature his work and that of his collaborators.

Ai Weiwei: Roots and Branches

Lisson Gallery, New York, 5 November – 23 December 2016

Professor Rana Mitter discusses contemporary Chinese culture with novelist and film maker Xiaolu Guo and Dr Katie Hill.

https://open.live.bbc.co.uk/mediaselector/6/redir/version/2.0/mediaset/audio-nondrm-download/proto/https/vpid/p02tw539.mp3

BBC World Service The Strand

Interview with Mark Coles and Katie Hill 11/05/2011

Ai Wei Wei

The Chinese artist Ai Wei Wei may still be missing but two new outdoor art works have been unveiled this week in London and New York. We discuss the new work and the artist's detention.

Duration: 10:48

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/play/p00ggyjd

China macht Druck - Zeitgenössische chinesische Druckgrafik Hardcover – Jan. 31 2008

German edition by Oliver Kornhoff (Author), Anne Farrer (Author), Huang Liaoyuan (Author), Isabell Schenk-Weininger (Author), Katie Hill (Author)

The land of the middle makes talk of itself. The economy is booming, the Olympiad is attracting attention worldwide, and even in the international art scene, the Chinese are currently the stars. So China is making powerful pressure. In the literal sense, also in the publication of the Municipal Gallery Bietigheim-Bissingen, in which the exciting field of current Chinese print graphics is presented. The emphasis is on the post-cultural revolutionary period of the 1980s to the present day. The majority of the screen prints, woodcuts, lithographs and etchings presented in this catalogue comes from a private collection from Beijing and has never been seen in Germany before. Other high-profile works from German and international collections make the book an excellent overview of contemporary printmaking in the Land of Smiles. Artists involved include Fang Lijun, Liu Ye, Lu Hao, Ren Rong, Su Xinping, Tan Ping, Wang Guangyi, Xu Bing, Xue Song, Yang Shaobin, Yue Minjun, Zeng Fanzhi, Zhang Xiaogang, Zhou Tiehai and Zhou Chunya.

Research Collection.

OCCA’s Research Collection comprises material gathered from focused research projects undertaken by OCCA in partnership with artists, art professionals, and researchers. It is a growing repository of primary source material, photographic documentation, video recordings, ephemera, and more. OCCA aims to digitise more resources and make them accessible for users worldwide.

Featured Artists.

Zhao Bandi, Am I Dreaming?

Zhao Bandi.

July 1997: Exchange by Zhao Bandi. A piece of earth, measuring 25 x 25 x 25 centimetres, is removed from the ground near the Ming Tombs in Beijing and loaded into a case. The earth is then taken as luggage to London where it is unloaded in London’s docklands. A similar chunk of earth from the site in London is then removed and taken back to Beijing

Huang Xiaopeng 1960-2020

Huang Xiaopeng.

Huang was a member of the Southern Artist Salon, a student-led artist group that emerged in Guangzhou during China’s ’85 New Wave movement, and was also committed to educating the next generation of artists with his innovative teaching methods. In his own artworks he employed video and created installations to investigate the phenomena of things being “lost in translation” and displacement in the context of globalization and cultural exchange.