Comments/Context: Given that there aren't many male nudes in contemporary Chinese photography, Shen Wei's new self-portraits could certainly be called cultural outliers. His documents of self expression follow the path of the calm and the understated rather than the overtly provocative or the knowingly political, tracing an inward-looking personal exploration with remarkably restrained sensitivity. There is still, of course, tension in these pictures, but it is reserved and quiet, open but uncertain.
Most of Shen's images play with the angles of his body: bent knees on a window sill, an arched back bend, a straight leg interrupting a table top still life, a triangular elbow propping up his head. His graceful stance in a submerged boat, using his outstretched leg to make concentric ripples in the light dappled water reminded me of Thomas Eakins. A few others offer complex, unknowable situations and interactions: a hand on his neck that might be either a caress or a choke, a bedside scene flanked by a nude woman and a sprawled man that offers any number of possible explanations. Shadows engulf many of the photographs, drawing our attention to the central figure in the light and adding a layer of introspective melancholy.
The best of these photographs left me impressed with Shen's growing compositional talents. When the pictures work, he successfully walks the line between realism and lyricism, all within the context of something genuinely personal.
Most of Shen's images play with the angles of his body: bent knees on a window sill, an arched back bend, a straight leg interrupting a table top still life, a triangular elbow propping up his head. His graceful stance in a submerged boat, using his outstretched leg to make concentric ripples in the light dappled water reminded me of Thomas Eakins. A few others offer complex, unknowable situations and interactions: a hand on his neck that might be either a caress or a choke, a bedside scene flanked by a nude woman and a sprawled man that offers any number of possible explanations. Shadows engulf many of the photographs, drawing our attention to the central figure in the light and adding a layer of introspective melancholy.
The best of these photographs left me impressed with Shen's growing compositional talents. When the pictures work, he successfully walks the line between realism and lyricism, all within the context of something genuinely personal.
Rating: * (one star) GOOD (rating system described here)
Transit Hub:
Shen Wei, I Miss You Already
Through October 27th
508 West 26th Street (new location)
New York, NY 10001
Dear DLK,
ReplyDeleteThank you for visiting the exhibition and the great review!
Dan
"Given that there aren't many male nudes in contemporary Chinese photography..."
ReplyDeleteI'm guessing you don't look at much Chinese photography: over the last 4 or 5 years the Chinese photo-blogosphere has largely been dominated by naked Ryan Mcginley copyists. See the guy called "223" and the short-lived love story "my little dead dick" for starters.