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Venue
Pearl Lam Galleries (Hong Kong)
Date
2013.11.19 Tue - 2014.01.09 Thu
Opening Exhibition
10/19/2013 15:00
Address
Pedder Building, 12 Pedder Street, Hong Kong
Telephone
+852 2522 1428
Opening Hours
Monday–Saturday 10 am – 7 pm
Director
Pearl Lam
Email
info@pearllamgalleries.com

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Yinka Shonibare MBE: Dreaming Rich
[Press Release]

[Press Release]
Yinka Shonibare MBE, Champagne Kid 7, (2013), Unique life-size mannequin, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, leather, resin, chair, globe and Cristal champagne bottle, 178 x 85 x 76cmcm. Copyright of artist.

Yinka Shonibare MBE, Champagne Kid 8, unique life-size mannequin, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, leather, resin, chair, globe and Cristal champagne bottle, 178 x 85 x 76cmcm, 2013

HONG KONG, 30 September, 2013 – Pearl Lam Galleries is delighted to present the first solo exhibition in Hong Kong by renowned British-Nigerian artist Yinka Shonibare MBE; Dreaming Rich, opening on 19 November 2013 (Press Preview 18 November, 2013, 3-5pm). The exhibition continues Shonibare’s exploration of colonialism and post-colonialism with a series of all new works commenting on Hong Kong’s modern day relationships with labour, power and wealth.

Yinka Shonibare MBE, Champagne Kid 8, unique life-size mannequin, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, leather, resin, chair, globe and Cristal champagne bottle, 178 x 85 x 76cmcm, 2013

Dreaming Rich is a characteristically exuberant and colourful critique of wealth, which simultaneously acknowledges society’s complicity with it. Shonibare’s questioning of cultural and national definitions is a pertinent one for Hong Kong, whose identity has been affected by the conflicting influences of Chinese and British colonialism. The exhibition offers a social commentary on Hong Kong’s fascination with luxury commodities, and how those have come in part a medium for social identity.

Cakeman, the centerpiece of the exhibition, is a life-sized sculpture of an aristocrat dressed in elaborate Victorian dress made out of Shonibare’s trademark Dutch wax African batik fabric, which through its Indonesian design references Asia and the continent’s colonial practices. The material references European colonial practices in Africa and, in the context of Dreaming Rich, draws a comparison between the perspectives of colonial wealth and power in Africa and China. Cakeman subverts an act of heavy labour into an image of decadence by depicting a man bent double carrying a precariously balanced tower of colourful cakes on his back. In this figure Shonibare re-imagines a reconstruction of the trappings of power, bringing into sharp focus the contradiction faced by all societies which aspire to do well and “get rich”; where the process of creating vast amounts of wealth relies on the hardships of a labour class.

Yinka Shonibare MBE, Champagne Kid 7, unique life-size mannequin, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, leather, resin, chair, globe and Cristal champagne bottle, 178 x 85 x 76cmcm, 2013

 

The artist is interested in the point at which survival turns into greed and excess. The individual Champagne Kid sculptures that can be seen cavorting, or swinging from chairs attached to the walls of the gallery, develop Shonibare’s recent line of enquiry into the corruption, excess and debauchery that have in part lead to the current economic crisis.

These life-sized drunken aristocratic youths seen alongside Cake Man construct an image of wealth and the sense of an over-indulgent party into which the gallery visitor is immediately immersed. Following a recurring theme in his work Shonibare has removed the figure’s heads, calling to mind the guillotined fate that awaited the excessive and corrupt French aristocracy in the 18th Century. Here globes displaying monetary data take the place of faces, which combined with the exuberant poses of the champagne-swigging youths, build a powerful commentary on the excess of anonymous financiers across the globe that contributed to the 2008 financial crisis.

Yinka Shonibare MBE, Champagne Kid 6, unique life-size mannequin, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, leather, resin, chair, globe and Cristal champagne bottle, 178 x 85 x 76cmcm, 2013

The exhibition’s exploration of the contemporary worship of commodities is further elaborated in a newly created Bling Painting wall installation measuring six meters wide and containing 27 round paintings. Each of the circular canvases painted black and gold with toys collected from Hong Kong attached by black and gold wires. Shown alongside five new large-scale collage works on paper that use gold leaf, cuttings from the Financial Times, batik fabric flowers and luxury magazine covers, Shonibare’s reflection on the Hong Kong economy and its desire for luxury goods is a poignant reminder of the cycle of contradictions surrounding wealth and power, poverty and danger; dare to dream rich and you may lose your head, fail to dream rich and risk dying of poverty.

Althea Viafora-Kress, International Gallery Director, Pearl Lam Galleries, said, “Shonibare has transformed the gallery space. His immaculately dressed figures create a poignant critique of the trappings of wealth and politics encouraging us all to think about how both affect our daily life. We couldn’t be more pleased to present the first solo show of Shonibare’s work in Hong Kong, where I feel sure it will take on a particular resonance given the city’s fascinating colonialist history.”

Yinka Shonibare MBE, Champagne Kid 6, unique life-size mannequin, Dutch wax printed cotton textile, leather, resin, chair, globe and Cristal champagne bottle, 178 x 85 x 76cmcm, 2013

Press Enquiries
Cher Zhou / Pearl Lam Galleries
cher@pearllamfineart.com / +8621 6323 1989
Erica Siu / Phoebe Moore / Sutton PR Asia
erica@suttonprasia.com / phoebe@suttonprasia.com / +852 2528 0792

Exhibition Dates
19 November – 9 January, 2013 (Press preview on 18 November, 2013, 3-5pm)
Monday-Saturday, 10am–7pm
Pearl Lam Galleries, 601–605, 6/F, Pedder Building, 12 Pedder Street, Central, Hong Kong