Title
What We Do Is SecretPosted In
Photography, ExhibitionArtist
Ren HangDuration
18 June 2016 to 23 July 2016Venue
MAMA GalleryOpening Hours
Wednesday - Saturday 12.00 - 17.00Location
Telephone
+1 (213) 256-0036Detailed Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Title | What We Do Is Secret | Posted In | Photography, Exhibition | Artist | Ren Hang |
Duration | 18 June 2016 to 23 July 2016 | Venue | MAMA Gallery | Opening Hours | Wednesday - Saturday 12.00 - 17.00 |
Location |
1242 Palmetto Street Los Angeles, CA 90013
United States | Telephone | +1 (213) 256-0036 | [email protected] |
Nudity as a subject matter came to him naturally, “I didn’t even think about it” he confesses, which explains his complete disregard of boundaries and decorum. What the viewer might assume as provocation or lewdness is in other words the unadulterated self-expression of an artist. This also explains why most of the models Hang uses are his friends, with whom he can be more spontaneous and relaxed and with whom he has more leeway to experiment at his leisure. And experiment he does, constructing surreal landscapes and sensual sculptures out of naked bodies, limbs, plants and animals.
Curiously, the people in Hang’s photos never show any emotions. No matter how bizarre the concept is or how contorted their posture becomes and despite their nakedness, they retain a stoic countenance giving viewers the freedom to interpret what they see as they please. Furthermore and running counter to his intuitive approach to shooting, Hang’s photographs also embrace a certain kind of formalism, expressed most markedly in their compositional symmetry, which along with the expressionless models, both contrast and complement their sexually-charged exhibitionism. This aspect brings to mind Robert Mapplethorpe whose photographs were also meticulously staged as well as characterized by an uninhibited exploration of the naked body and a penchant for the drôle.
The exhibition’s title “What We Do is Secret” was selected by the gallery not only to signify the no-holds-barred, sensual camaraderie depicted in the photos but also because it references the 70s LA-based punk band The Germs. Known for its penchant for luridness, excess and anarchy, the band points to the counter-cultural fueled iconoclasm that characterizes Hang’s work—which notably has gotten him in trouble in his native China where nudity and sexuality are strictly censored. Although Hang himself denies there is any sociopolitical message or any significance whatsoever behind his work, stressing that “my works don't share any attitudes of mine”, one can’t help but attributing some meaning or other—a jab at heterosexual mores, a reflection of youth’s rebellious nature or perhaps a plea for man’s and nature’s peaceful coexistence—which is, after all, the hallmark of true art.