Exposition

Wang Xiyao: Multidirectional Aesthetic Experience in Abstract Painting (last edited: 2025)

BANGHUA SUN

About this exposition

Wang Xiyao (1992) is a leading abstract Chinese painter based in Berlin, whose complex account of intercultural abstraction sees Eastern tradition deep in dialogue with contemporary Western language. It has replaced vivid, multilayered-meanings, deep personal experience, cultural memory, and common history, which have traditionally formalist postulates. Under the mentorship of Werner Büttner and Anselm Reyle and also inspired by Cy Twombly, Joan Mitchell, and Julie Mehretu, she began to elaborate a dynamic practice based on rhythmically interplaying color, line, and space. Many works are inspired by poetic and philosophical tradition, employing concepts such as Chinese Liu Bai (留白, intentional blank space) and moving into physical expression through dance and martial arts. In this respect, Wang's working process in creation corresponds to the concept of bodily perception in Maurice Merleau-Ponty and experiential aesthetics in John Dewey, considering immersion in the multisensory approach rather than pure visual contemplation. By an original synthesis in manifold aesthetic and sensory modalities, she thus develops multidirectional experiences, which are fascinatingly active and dialogic in the sense that they stir her viewer into an incessant questioning about form, culture, and consciousness.
typeresearch exposition
keywordsabstract painting, formalism, eastern aesthetics, cross-cultural aesthetics, experiential aesthetics, bodily perception
date19/06/2025
last modified19/06/2025
statusin progress
share statuspublic
copyrightBANGHUA SUN
licenseCC BY-NC-ND
languageEnglish
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/3763520/3763519


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