Source: Chinese Museum (nd)
Convergence: The Art of Zhou Xiaoping in Aboriginal Australia
Online from 25th June 2020, with the physical exhibition later in 2020.
Zhou Xiaoping’s art sheds light on traditions of art making that have been overlooked within the cannon of Western art history … he helps us look at cross-cultural art production in ways that are reinvigorating, respectful and enlightening. In so many ways the work of Zhou Xiaoping remains new and confronting.
Professor Robyn Sloggett (2020)
Director, the Grimwade Centre for Cultural Materials Conservation of the University of Melbourne
Artist’s statement
The world suddenly seems to be a roaring lion that does not welcome a human invasion.
In 2020, under the worldwide attack of the coronavirus, humans seem to be awakening. The humans who have occupied the world are not powerful as we thought. We may fall in an instant. It is very frustrating that if the world is without humans, it will still continue in its life and beauty. So people in this world are more like guests.
From April 2017 to April 2018, I held a touring exhibition entitled Dialogues with The Dreaming: The Art of Zhou Xiaoping in Australia at Beijing’s Today Art Museum, Chengdu’s Contemporary Art Museum, Jiangsu’s Modern Art Museum and the Shenzhen Art Museum, in China. The exhibition demonstrated my cross-cultural artistic practice and brought together the influence of Chinese, Western and Aboriginal culture and art concepts. In this practical process, I realised how important cultural reconciliation and civilisational exchange are.
When I lived in the Outback, it allowed me, as an artist, to re-examine the complexity and the weight of the world I live in, and to reconsider the origins of art, thus providing more possibilities for the recreation of art – in particular, the main forms of creative expression in contemporary art, including protests, satire, counterculture, and subversion. Subversion is not the only method of artistic creativity. Learning and borrowing inspiration from nature are also highly creative. The richness and might of nature go far beyond human imagination. In the human world, the Aborigines understand the richness of nature better than anyone, and the power of divinity makes that richness greater. Every national culture contains divine genes and molecules.
Looking back at my artistic creation process in Australia, I feel that I followed the path of “learning from nature” from the traditional Chinese culture that I accepted when I was young, then followed that path from China to the world of the Australian Aborigines.
This exhibition is a continuation of the 2017 Dialogues with The Dreaming exhibition in China, and it is a sorting and inspection of my thirty-year creation of art. The works are all located in Australia, at ACIAC Western Sydney University, Live in Art Sydney, and the Museum of Chinese Australian History and ACAE Gallery, both in Melbourne.
Zhou Xiaoping: An Extraordinary Artist
Dr Lyndon Ormond-Parker
Australia as a nation has always sought to close the tyranny of distance. In his 1966 book The Tyranny of Distance: How Distance Shaped Australia’s History, Geoffrey Blainey, an Australian historian, academic, philanthropist and commentator, wrote of the geographical isolation that Australians felt from the nation’s coloniser, Great Britain, and the major European powers and economies. Modern Australians have always sought to break down this geographical-isolation ‘tyranny of distance’ through technological development and engaging in local regional partnerships. Today, in these challenging times, the strengthened opportunities for digital engagement through Zhou Xiaoping’s online exhibition are a commitment to sharing the rich cultural heritage of humanity.
Zhou Xiaoping is an extraordinary and legendary artist who has collaborated with many Australian Aboriginal artists. His work has featured in many exhibitions in Australia and internationally. In 2011 it was memorialised in an award-winning, internationally acclaimed documentary by James Bradley and Rachel Clements, Ochre and Ink.
As Professor Robyn Sloggett observes, “Zhou Xiaoping’s art sheds light on traditions of art making that have been overlooked within the canon of Western art history… he helps us look at cross-cultural art production in ways that are reinvigorating, respectful and enlightening. In so many ways the work of Zhou Xiaoping remains new and confronting.” To continue reading this essay please click here
Zhou Xiaoping
Zhou Xiaoping is a Melbourne-based artist and curator, born and educated in China. Since 1988 he has been actively engaged with Aboriginal communities in Arnhem Land and the Kimberley.
He has created a unique artistic style by incorporating his new Aboriginal experiences into the traditional Chinese classic painting that he had learnt in China. Chinese and Aboriginal arts and cultures meet in his artworks, generating a new aesthetic while telling his story in Australia.
Zhou’s collaboration with the late Jimmy Pike resulted in the first exhibition of Aboriginal art work at Hefei Jiuliumi Art Museum, Hefei, China in 1996, and then held at the National Gallery of China in 1999.
He was the driving force behind the ten-year “Trepang: China and the Story of Macassan–Aboriginal Trade” project from 2002 to 2011, in collaboration with Professor Marcia Langton, Foundation Chair in Australian Indigenous Studies at the University of Melbourne, which led to several exhibitions and a significant publication.
Zhou was the principal artist in “Trepang: China & the Story of Macassan – Aboriginal Trade”, both at The Capital Museum in Beijing and the Melbourne Museum in Australia in 2011.
The international award-winning documentary film “Ochre and Ink” was broadcast on ABC1 Australia, in 2012.
In 2014, Zhou was invited by the Australian Embassy in Paris to open his solo show at the Embassy.
In 2017 Zhou was awarded the Australia China Council grant to tour his solo exhibition “Dialogues with The Dreaming – the art of Zhou Xiaoping in Australia” at Today Art Museum (Beijing), Museum of Contemporary Art Chengdu, Modern Art Museum Jiangsu and the Shenzhen Art Museum, in China.
Zhou has held 50 solo exhibitions worldwide, and has published two Chinese language books on his experiences with Aboriginal communities. He has worked on a mural project at Mutitjulu in Northern Territory. In 2014 he was invited to undertake a residency at the University of French Polynesia and Museum of Tahiti and its Islands.