The Economist - USA (2022-02-12)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist February 12th 2022 Culture 75

writerschurningoutasmanyas30,000
wordsa day.Allthesame,itprovidesthe
fantasyworldstowhichhundredsofmil­
lionsofChinesepeopleregularlyescape—
mythological and imperial pasts, the
underworld,thezombieapocalypse.
A gripping chapter of “The Subplot”
mapsouttheimaginaryelementsofChi­
nesesciencefiction—thegenreinwhich
Chinesewriters,aboveallLiuCixin,have
enjoyedmostsuccessoverseas.Boostedby
thepandemic, intrusive technology has
cometoseemall­pervasiveinChina;inter­
net censorship and granular high­tech
surveillanceare nowroutine.Storiesby
writerssuch asNian Yu andHan Song

explorethedystopianimplicationsofthe
“monstersthatrampantnewtechnologies
havethoughtlesslycreated”,asMsWalsh
putsit.MrHan,forinstance,depictsthe
transformation of human minds and
bodies into “another outdated piece of
hardwareinneedofanupgrade”.
Thebookmakesa powerfulcaseforAn­
glophonereaderswhowanttounderstand
Chinatolookpasttheheadlinesandturn
toliterature.Thecountry’screativewriters
navigatebothencroachingcensorshipand
relentless commercial pressures. Yet in
fantastical,satiricalandprovocativeways,
their work vibrantlyreimagines China’s
past,presentandfuture. n

Contemporaryart

Heart in mouth


W


ithitssunlitcupolaandflutedmar­
ble  staircase,  Ely  House  has  long
been a place of silent contemplation. In the
18th century the grand Mayfair town house
was  the  episcopal  residence  of  Edmund
Keene, an English bishop. Since 2017 it has
fostered  a  different  kind  of  reverence,  as
one  of  the  contemporary­art  showcases
run by Thaddaeus Ropac, an Austrian gal­
lery owner. In this normally hushed envi­
ronment,  the  sound  of  giggling  that  rang
through the building on a recent afternoon
was pleasantly jarring.
Two  students  from  east  London  were
lying  on  the  floor  to  gaze  at  a  long,
unframed  canvas  tacked  just  above  the
skirting  board.  They  pointed  and  laughed
as they tried to decipher the imagery, with
its  scribbles  and  slabs  of  pinks  and  yel­
lows, greys and reds. A third young visitor
was poised on one leg, wondering whether
to  hop  over  or  onto  another  painting  that
had been stuck to the floor like a doormat. 
Like  that  of  the  Italian  Arte  Povera
movement in the late 1960s, this is art that
toys with traditional notions of painting—
all  that  rectangular  formality,  respectful
framing  and  careful  placing  of  pictures  at
eye  level  on  a  gallery  wall.  Both  paintings
are  by  Rachel  Jones,  a  31­year­old  black
British artist who was brought up in Essex
by  a  Jamaican  mother  and  a  Bajan  father.
The  laughing  young  visitors  might  not
have ventured into a Mayfair gallery were it
not showing work that captures their con­
cerns and shares their cultural references,
including music, Instagram and the Black
Lives  Matter  protests.  “She  paints  our
world,” one of them said. 
Ms Jones studied at the Glasgow School


ofArtandthenatthe  Royal  Academy  of
Arts  in  London.  There  her  graduate  show
caught  the  eyes  of  Zoe  Whitley  of  the
Chisenhale  Gallery  in  the  capital’s  East
End,  who  is  known  for  discovering  and
nurturing  new  talent,  and  Ralph  Rugoff,
head of the Hayward Gallery and curator of
the  Venice  Biennale  in  2019.  In  “Mixing  It
Up”, an exhibition of British painting at the
Hayward last autumn, Mr Rugoff chose to
place two of Ms Jones’s biggest pictures op­
posite  some  by  Oscar  Murillo,  a  dynamic
Colombian  painter.  In  their  colour  and
intensity,  her  pieces  were  more  than  a

match  for  Mr  Murillo’s  muscular  blues,
blacks and reds. 
At  the  Hayward,  Ms  Jones’s  paintings
were not formally hung but simply tacked
to  the  wall—as  they  were  in  the  recent
show  at  the  Ropac  gallery,  and  will  be  in
another  that  is  scheduled  to  open  at  the
Chisenhale  on  March  12th.  Unstretched
and raw­edged, one was over seven metres
wide and both were majestic. The bigger of
the  two,  “lick  your  teeth,  they  so  clutch”,
pulsates with colour and depth. Its jostling
shapes  cohere  into  a  recognisable  form:
around  the  outer  edge  is  a  patchwork  of
blood  and  flesh,  and  teeth  are  strung
across  the  middle  like  gravestones.  It  is  a
painting  of  a  mouth,  but  viewed  from  an
intriguing  perspective.  You  cannot  tell  if
you are inside it peering out or on the out­
side looking in. 
Even  to  fill  her  biggest  canvases,  Ms
Jones uses only oil sticks and pastels. She
says  she  can  work  both  faster  and  more
precisely  with  these  than  with  paints  and
brushes, a technique that yields a raw, elec­
tric  energy.  In  contrast  to  some  big­name
contemporary  artists,  whose  output  is
manufactured  in  studio­factories,  she  is
herself part of the picture: every mark, ev­
ery  line,  every  frenzied  dash  shows  what
the  artist’s  hand  is  doing.  The  composi­
tion, the velocity and the riot of colours—
some  hot  and  some  cool—all  suggest  an
artist in pursuit of an emotional response.
As she once put it, the experience of seeing
her paintings is meant to resemble “feeling
with your eyes”.
At  school,  Ms  Jones  says,  she  was  only
ever  one  of  a  small  handful  of  black  chil­
dren; later, as an art student, she respond­
ed to being stared at by painting eyes. The
mouth, with its contradictory allusions to
nourishment  and  vomiting,  smiling  and
grimacing,  offered  her  a  broader  visual
metaphor.  For  Ms  Jones,  it  evokes  an  era
when the health of African slaves who had
been shipped across the Atlantic was cali­
brated by the state of their teeth. One of the
teeth  in  the  Hayward  painting  is  orna­
mented  with  small  circles  outlined  in
red—a reference, she says, to the success of
contemporary black fashion designers and
musicians,  who  sometimes  adorn  their
teeth with coloured gemstones.
Painting  is  a  form  of  political  engage­
ment  for  Ms  Jones,  but  her  art  is  more
thoughtful than didactic. As much as polit­
ical  slogans,  the  mouths  she  paints  speak
of joyful human pastimes such as singing
or kissing. Her technical prowess, and her
deep engagement with urgent ideas about
race  and  justice,  have  attracted  museums
and  collectors.  Her  most  recent  commer­
cial show sold out; institutions are eager to
exhibit  her  work.  But  it  is  the  emotional
impact it has on youngviewers, like those
lying  on  the  floorinMayfair,  which  best
attests to its power.n

Theme and technique make Rachel Jones an artist of the moment

Abigger canvas
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