Date: Saturday 3 June 2023 – Saturday 9 September 2023
Free Entry
Monday – Saturday. 10am – 4pm.
Closed Sundays & Bank Holidays.
Plan your visit here.
A poetic exploration of the relationship between nature, culture, and power in the digital age. Through a series of paintings and sculptures, viewers are invited to contemplate the rise and fall of civilisations in the age of globalisation. The show is constructed around the concept of a Chinese garden with sculptures created from Financial Times newspapers which draw inspiration from traditional Chinese ‘scholar’s rocks’ or ‘spirit stones’. Embodying microcosms of landscapes they are meditative focal points between nature and civilisation.
Links
‘Gordon Cheung: The Garden of Perfect Brightness’ at The Atkinson, Southport. – The Fourdrinier, Kirsty Jukes, 1 August 2023 – thefourdrinier.com/gordon-cheung-the-garden-of-perfect-brightness-at-the-atkinson-southport
Review: Gordon Cheung at The Atkinson – Art in Liverpool, Kathryn Wainwright, 10 July 2023 – artinliverpool.com/features/reviews/review-gordon-cheung-at-the-atkinson
Bursting Blooms Link Modernity and History in Gordon Cheung’s Decadent Still-Life Paintings – Kate Mothes, Colossal, 23 May 2023 – thisiscolossal.com/2023/05/gordon-cheung-still-life-paintings
Gordon Cheung: The Garden of Perfect Brightness – Working Statement. 13 April 2023 – theatkinson.co.uk/2023/04/gordon-cheung
Collecting Guide: Scholars’ rocks. The fantastically-shaped stones that have inspired China’s poets and painters. – Christie’s, 23 November 2015 – christies.com/features/Collecting-Guide-Scholars-Rocks-6815-1.aspx
Biography
Born 1975 in London to Chinese parents, Gordon Cheung has developed an innovative approach to making art, which blurs virtual and actual reality to reflect on the existential questions of what it means to be human in civilisations with histories written by victors. Cheung raises questions and critiques the effects of global capitalism, its underlying mechanisms of power on our perception of identity, territory and sense of belonging. These narratives are refracted through the prisms of culture, mythology, religion, and politics into dreamlike spaces of urban surreal worlds that are rooted in his in-between identity.
Cheung graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting in 1998 from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London and earned his Masters of Fine Arts in 2001 from the Royal College of Art in London. Select solo shows include Jack Shainman Gallery in New York, The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, The New Art Gallery Walsall, Walsall UK, The Light that Burns Twice as Bright, Cristea Gallery, London UK, Here Be Dragons, Nottingham Castle Museum and Art Gallery, Nottingham, UK and New Order Vanitas, Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens, West Palm Beach, FL, USA. His works are held in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., the Whitworth Art Museum in Manchester, Royal College of Art in London, and the British Museum, amongst others. He lives and works in London.
gordoncheung.com / Facebook / Twitter / Instagram / YouTube