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    FU SITE

    Fu-Site---Portrait---Crédit-Li-Boyan

    A complex assembly of shadows and reflections, human presences, images of interiors and natural landscapes, Fu Site’s pictorial language borrows the codes of the oneiric world, to give life to scenes that open the field of interpretation. By subtly combining fragmented images and overlapped narrative layers, Fu Site knows how to provoke a certain ambiguity on our perception of time, depriving the scene of any logical coherence.

    Like memories or spectres, his enigmatic anti-heroes softly appear on the turbid surface of the canvas: they inhabit space without really belonging to it. Their juxtaposition with baroque decorations and, more recently, contemporary interiors, whose elements are sometimes barely suggested, plunges the viewer into an ongoing story with multiple outcomes

    Fu Site was born in the Liaoning province (China) in 1984. He graduated from the Tsinghua University in Beijing (2006), the École des Beaux-Arts in Versailles (2011) and the École Supérieure d’Art du Nord-Pas-de-Calais (2014). In 2013 he was awarded with the first Canson Prix Art School painting award.

    Born in Liaoning, China in 1984
    Currently works and lives in Paris, France

    SOLO EXHIBITIONS

    2023
    Solo show, MadeIn Art Museum, Shanghai, China

    2022
    Jeux de Créatures, PARIS-B, Paris, France

    2018
    Fu Site: Forking Paths | GAWA (TCT and Co.x W. Ming), W. Ming Art, Shanghai, China

    2017
    Disruped Narrative, Galerie PARIS-B, Paris, France

    2014
    Politicians, Solo Exhibition, Galerie PARIS-B, Paris, France

    GROUP EXHIBITIONS

    2023
    Group Show, Start Museum, Shanghai

    2022
    We borrow dreams from others, like debt, MadeIn Art Museum, Shanghai, China
    High Voltage Three, Nassima Landau Art Foundation, Tel Aviv, Israel

    2020
    What You’ve missed, Galerie PARIS-B, Paris, France

    2017
    De l’Est à Paris, Liu Haisu Museum, Shanghai, Chine

    2015
    State of mind – Painting China Now, Group show, Galerie PARIS-B, Paris, France

    2014
    Don’t Look Back, Galerie PARIS-B, Brussels, Belgium

    2013
    Life, Death and Beauty, Parcours d’artistes-40 BAM (Musée des Beaux-Arts de Mons),
    Mons, Belgium
    Parcours d’art contemporain de Carcassonne, Hotel de la cité médiévale, Carcassonne, France
    Prix Art School, Espace Canson, 59 rue de Rivoli, Paris, France
    OOZ , Galerie de l’Ecole Supérieure d’art du Nord-Pas de Calais, Tourcoing, France
    La Chine s’expose, Centre culturel de Douvrin, Douvrin, France

    2010
    Prémices, galerie de l’Ecole des beaux-arts de Versailles, Versailles, France

    2006
    Gong mei bei, galerie de l’Université Tsinghua, Beijing, China

    AWARDS

    2013
    Canson Art School Prize, Winner
    Parcours d’art contemporain de Carcassonne Prize, Winner
    Concours de la peinture, La Tribu, Winner. Organized by Artension magazine in partnership with La Tribu des Artistes
    Concours Masque, Winner. Organized by CROUS Université

    “The Game of Eternal Becoming – On the Most Recent Paintings of Fu Site” Dec 2021, By Heinz-Norbert Jocks

    Fu Site’s extraordinary paintings resemble an escape from reality into a dream realm of the imagination, a fantastically surreal hemisphere, and yet, nevertheless, they unconsciously touch on reality. Seeing them, one has the intense impression that the painter, who was born in Liaoning in 1984 and lives in Paris today, relinquishes the guidance of his hand to hallucinations that, out of paint, “lie into truth” (Louis Aragon) ambivalent transitional visions. Inasmuch as he often begins by first intuitively composing a shape or drawing fragments that set off a chain reaction, indeed, a true flood, of associations – of emotions too – his method can still be best described as the Écriture automatique of the surrealists. Only with the subtle difference that he balances the endless possibilities with, among other things, the aid of a computer software program, and, through it, produces a contemporary, incomparable visual impression.
    Deprived of both a classification and being accessible through terms and definitions and unequivocal readability, they oscillate gently and with audacious lightness between figuration and the non-representational in such a way that we are unable to clearly fathom either. So much so that we involuntarily puzzle over whether anything at all is represented there, or whether what we think we can recognize is once again in the process of disintegrating, in order to quickly to become something else.
    The subtle way that Fu creates the interplay of shapes, as cheerful as they are colourful, and how he has them correspond with each other, demonstrates his proximity as a painter to film, and how he commits to a close liaison with the medium of the moving picture, by setting aspects of the image in motion and exploring the eternal process of their wondrous metamorphosis. That he has read Friedrich Nietzsche, the radical philosopher who praises eternal becoming and therefore transcendence, is evident. Equally so, his obsessive closeness to or rather fondness for Francis Bacon, who deformed and warped the shape of bodies in such a way that they appear as if they are transforming in just this moment. It is no doubt this aesthetic transformational effect Fu is interested in when he pursues a total fusion of the figurative and the abstract. This leaves us uncertain over what was there first: the abstract or the figurative form? The strange condition of these creations with something ghostly about them, taken from organic shapes and composed of fragments, symbolize for the painter, as he says, “the manifestation of a potential power of incarnation”. This is because for Fu, who graduated from Tsinghua University in Beijing in 2006, everything is constantly in flux. For him, there can no more be a standstill than there can be an end, as it signifies a new beginning.
    Ultimately, he is concerned with exploring the interconnectedness of complex forms of expression, as well as investigating the relationships between colour, space and volume and, if nothing else, the interweaving of what is drawn and what is painted.
    Everything in these pictures, which let us associate human and non-human beings in an extraplanetary sphere of weightlessness and bring to life mysterious relations between half-named and unnameable objects, appears to be of equal validity. There are no hierarchies whatsoever. In front of us are shapes that are transparent as well as impenetrable, as if created out of glass, which seem to dance with each other, to mingle, interlock and merge, only to once again come undone. There, in front of us, a cloudlike, still amorphous shape mutates into the teeth of an animal, which could equally well be a running horse with a tail or a monster from a science fiction world, and a human arm, stretched towards the sky, protrudes out of a red shape that we perceive as a garment in such a way that we think we see before us a figure with a missing head. Other shapes have the appearance of a wing which reminds us of Icarus’ futile attempts at flight. And a “woman in black,” who keeps her right hand open, stands in an empty room that abstract shapes flutter through like birds.
    The coexistence and dialogue between the figurative and the abstract illustrate that the painter is an obsessive raconteur, knowledgeable about mythology, who, when he elevates the transition between the nameable and the unnameable to his subject, reports on evolution and suggests stories that are unutterable. He is a master at allowing atmospheres of the unreal to develop that activate the collective unconscious and send us on the fantastic journey between image, association, emotion, consciousness, and visual experience.