16
21 February - 19 March 2005
Suling Wang's paintings address concerns relating to her identity and
location as an artist in an attempt to move towards a new kind of
abstraction. Fluid, calligraphic and cartoon-like forms are
superimposed on others that are suggestive of trees, stems and
rock-like structures. Imaginary crags and overhangs, tiered mountains
and submerged islands all overlap in planes that impart depth and
create rhythmic, but occasionally disharmonious, patterns. These
meticulously detailed layers are built up on a diaphanous ground, which
is characterized by sweeping strokes of colour that flow in and out of
the visual field.The individuality of this language has developed out of the artist's own sense of uncertainty regarding her placement within Eastern and Western cultures. Influenced by an understanding of the world based on the oral traditions she experienced in her childhood, there is a strong sense of history in the paintings and the geography of the island is a recurring theme. Sometimes an engulfing downpour or waterlogged world is depicted, representative of a place in a state of dissolution or flux, continually being changed by environmental forces. The images appear to fragment as quickly as they emerge and become strangely rendered and dislocated like shards left behind by a tide or floating as cultural debris. The viewer is encouraged to consider the origin of these forms and to become engaged with the creative process by employing the same playful invention that the artist experienced in their creation.