Details
JU MING
(ZHU MING, Chinese, B. 1938)
Roosters; & Untitled
signed and titled in Chinese; dated '89' (lower right); & signed in Chinese (lower right)
two ink and colour on paper
24.7 x 15 cm. (9 3/4 x 5 7/8 in.); & 24.7 x 15.2 cm. (9 3/4 x 5 7/8 in.)
Painted in 1989
one seal of the artist (2)
Provenance
Private Collection, Asia

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

SpaceDLiving Space

Martin Heidegger pointed out that it is through sculptures that we understand our place and our roots in the
world. The space we are looking for in this world is a space for life, a space that sculptures build and relate with us.

As described by Pan Yaochang from the Shanghai Art Academy, "The Living World series began with Ju Ming's visit to America in 1981. Apparently it was affected by American Pop Art. It displayed the common run of ordinary life, in a more worldly fashion than before, transforming the refinements of high art into something more relevant to ordinary people." (Pan Yaochang, Reach the Acme and Perfection Because of Lofty Morality: Reading Ju Ming)

Painting and sculpture have been brought into artistic unity. Living World Series (Lot 245, 255) presents a sense of primitivity and energy through minimalistic animal and human figures. The wooden texture of sculpture (Lot 253) perfectly complements a woman in pink dress with her hair tied into a bun. Ju employed techniques which are simple yet exact, depicting the hardships as well as potential of our everyday life while simultaneously accentuating individual personality and behaviours. By bridging the Living World Series with the notion of 'space', Ju Ming turns the negative space of a sculpture into a true living space.

More from Asian 20th Century Art (Day Sale)

View All
View All