2021.9.12-2021.10.31
Art+ Shanghai Gallery,East Beijing Road No.99, 2nd Floor, L207
RIPPED EDGES, RESTORED PERSPECTIVES
By Liya Prilipko
Those who have seen Fu Shuai’s work once will instantly
recognize it again. For years he has been committed to building a pictorial
syntax that could facilitate his research and reveal complex perceptual
relationships of people to their observed reality, the relationship of reality
to illusion, and their points of convergence and divergence.
Albeit seemingly straightforward appearance, Fu Shuai’s
works reward a mindful observer with baffling impressions. Crisp lines, laconic
forms, extraordinary rich visual textures, superb manipulation of colors,
precise references to the material world and uncanny depiction of real-life
processes of corrosion and dilapidation, illusion of volume, light, indentation
or protrusion, illusion of an illusion, dramatic fluorescent accents, and, very
recently added to his pictorial vocabulary, acutely realistic renderings of
tearing on materials, - all compose his distinguishing pictorial ecosystem of
multifaceted conceptually and visually contradictory relationships.
Fu Shuai’s hyper-real portrayals of rusted metal surfaces
and convincing visual illusions of volumetric forms instinctively create an
impulse in the brain to reach out and touch the surface or to change a vantage
point to make sure that what our eyes and mind perceive is what we really are
looking at. Fu Shuai achieves such effects through approaching every
square inch of his work with equal precision, crystalizing his imagery, without
hesitating to resort to technological advancements of the 21st century, if
needs be. As a result, his work goes beyond realism into an area similar to
trompe-l'oeil, similar but not identical, as, for Fu Shuai, it is never the
goal to mislead his viewer. On the contrary, the conception comes to a full
realization when the viewer identifies the visual trickery that the artist has
scrupulously incorporated. Fu Shuai intentionally designs scenarios where
precisely crafted illusions get exposed by other visual cues.
He creates with the viewer in mind, to the point that his
works exist less as objects to be examined than as generators of perceptual
responses in the eyes and mind of the viewer. His entire creative process is
dictated by this final goal, starting from the meticulous time- and
labor-intensive procedure of creating a paper that animates his work and gives
it its incredible texture, to learning the 3D modeling software to give his
forms the most natural lighting effects, to
employing laser cutter to recreate the most natural and
spontaneous effect of tearing and to produce ‘iron nails’,
with the 3D printer, which when attached to the artwork add physical volume to
otherwise flat surfaces.
The light and shadow effect, first modeled in 3D
software and painted later on the surface, evokes
the illusion of solidly three-dimensional objects, be it a single cube, two
cubes hovering in the space, or a tower of stacked up cubes. For those who have
not come across Fu Shuai’s work before, it is important to mention, that, as
his previous series have proven, the artist’s sense of perspective is
indisputable without having to resort to digital manipulation. It is the sheer
act of turning to technology to facilitate the absolute precision in the
portrayal of an illuminated object that matters here because it is this exact
precision that Fu Shuai unmasks as an illusion with the visual cue which we are
about to discuss. By creating a distance between the artwork and the wall it is
hung on, he prepares a scenario in which the work itself casts a shadow on the
surface outside of its boundaries. With some of the works, the artist goes a
step further and covers the back with fluorescent paint thus causing old rusty
metal surfaces to produce a fluorescent glow on the wall. Strikingly
out-of-place fluorescent accents in his work are the metaphor for the
ubiquitous presence of virtual reality that co-exists dangerously close with
the reality of our tangible world. In some of the series, the fluorescent pink,
yellow, and orange lightning-like beams dissect the hard rusty surfaces of the
metal sheets, which brings us to the next pictographic oxymoron.
In the Light Leak and Cube
Research – Rend series, Fu Shuai deepens his visual puzzle by placing
one illusion next to the other. Eerily palpable hard corroded metal pieces and
cubes are torn apart like thin sheets of paper. In some of the works, pieces of
metal seem to have been peeled off the surface in the most unlikely fashion.
Once again by means of utilizing digitally controlled technology, in this case,
a laser cutting machine, to produce an accurate rendering of ripped paper
edges, Fu Shuai implants a visual cue that exposes yet another precisely
crafted visual inconsistency.
By establishing such contradictory physical and
conceptual relationships between various aspects of his work, Fu Shuai places
it in an intermediate position between two- and the three-dimensional world,
between painterly and sculptural realm, referring to it as 2 ½ D.
Not only speaking from the stance of portrayed
three-dimensionality and materiality but also deliberating on the technical and
physical qualities, none of Fu Shuai’s works are entirely flat. Due to the
distance that sets them away from the wall, most of the works expand beyond the
borders of the flat surface producing a shadow on the physical space around
them. In those works that don’t, as a means of defying the flatness of the picture
plane, Fu Shuai incorporates 3D printed elements that look like nails hammered
through the surface of the picture.
The 2 ½ D that Fu Shuai refers to in his work mirrors the
intermediate state of reality that surrounds us in the world outside of his creations.
If you were to see Fu Shuai’s works scattered in the vicinity of an abandoned
factory, most likely you would have walked right past them, habitually
regarding them as industrial debris that fit so naturally to the setting.
Carefully designed illusions and revealing cues would have gone unnoticed and
unappreciated. This hypothetical situation perfectly explains the nature of
people's behavior in a modern-day world.
Our perception of reality is heavily based on our vision
that in the process of evolution has become extremely discriminating. A quick
glance allows us to pick up information essential for survival and move through
the world efficiently. But what if the environment that surrounds us is
permeated with things that routinely mimic textures, flavors, and appearances
of other things. Every one of us has a little bit of Fu Shuai inside conjuring
up illusions of spaces and materials in areas we inhabit, masquerading our
bodies and faces with clothes and make-up, producing food that tastes and looks
like something else, utilizing technology to alter virtually anything to
project the intensified version of reality
to the world, flinging aside the authentic and
genuine.
Fu Shuai’s uncanny
representations shed light on the illusionist’s world of effects and appearances
outside of his creations. The perplexing visual and cognitive experiences
evoked by his work are purifying. Not only does the artist question the
boundaries between the painted world and ours, but by identifying complex
relationships within his work he lets us become more discerning and aware of
the complexities of our world that can’t be grasped quickly and take time to
uncover.
RIPPED EDGES, RESTORED PERSPECTIVES
By Liya Prilipko
Those who have seen Fu Shuai’s work once will instantly
recognize it again. For years he has been committed to building a pictorial
syntax that could facilitate his research and reveal complex perceptual
relationships of people to their observed reality, the relationship of reality
to illusion, and their points of convergence and divergence.
Albeit seemingly straightforward appearance, Fu Shuai’s
works reward a mindful observer with baffling impressions. Crisp lines, laconic
forms, extraordinary rich visual textures, superb manipulation of colors,
precise references to the material world and uncanny depiction of real-life
processes of corrosion and dilapidation, illusion of volume, light, indentation
or protrusion, illusion of an illusion, dramatic fluorescent accents, and, very
recently added to his pictorial vocabulary, acutely realistic renderings of
tearing on materials, - all compose his distinguishing pictorial ecosystem of
multifaceted conceptually and visually contradictory relationships.
Fu Shuai’s hyper-real portrayals of rusted metal surfaces
and convincing visual illusions of volumetric forms instinctively create an
impulse in the brain to reach out and touch the surface or to change a vantage
point to make sure that what our eyes and mind perceive is what we really are
looking at. Fu Shuai achieves such effects through approaching every
square inch of his work with equal precision, crystalizing his imagery, without
hesitating to resort to technological advancements of the 21st century, if
needs be. As a result, his work goes beyond realism into an area similar to
trompe-l'oeil, similar but not identical, as, for Fu Shuai, it is never the
goal to mislead his viewer. On the contrary, the conception comes to a full
realization when the viewer identifies the visual trickery that the artist has
scrupulously incorporated. Fu Shuai intentionally designs scenarios where
precisely crafted illusions get exposed by other visual cues.
He creates with the viewer in mind, to the point that his
works exist less as objects to be examined than as generators of perceptual
responses in the eyes and mind of the viewer. His entire creative process is
dictated by this final goal, starting from the meticulous time- and
labor-intensive procedure of creating a paper that animates his work and gives
it its incredible texture, to learning the 3D modeling software to give his
forms the most natural lighting effects, to
employing laser cutter to recreate the most natural and
spontaneous effect of tearing and to produce ‘iron nails’,
with the 3D printer, which when attached to the artwork add physical volume to
otherwise flat surfaces.
The light and shadow effect, first modeled in 3D
software and painted later on the surface, evokes
the illusion of solidly three-dimensional objects, be it a single cube, two
cubes hovering in the space, or a tower of stacked up cubes. For those who have
not come across Fu Shuai’s work before, it is important to mention, that, as
his previous series have proven, the artist’s sense of perspective is
indisputable without having to resort to digital manipulation. It is the sheer
act of turning to technology to facilitate the absolute precision in the
portrayal of an illuminated object that matters here because it is this exact
precision that Fu Shuai unmasks as an illusion with the visual cue which we are
about to discuss. By creating a distance between the artwork and the wall it is
hung on, he prepares a scenario in which the work itself casts a shadow on the
surface outside of its boundaries. With some of the works, the artist goes a
step further and covers the back with fluorescent paint thus causing old rusty
metal surfaces to produce a fluorescent glow on the wall. Strikingly
out-of-place fluorescent accents in his work are the metaphor for the
ubiquitous presence of virtual reality that co-exists dangerously close with
the reality of our tangible world. In some of the series, the fluorescent pink,
yellow, and orange lightning-like beams dissect the hard rusty surfaces of the
metal sheets, which brings us to the next pictographic oxymoron.
In the Light Leak and Cube
Research – Rend series, Fu Shuai deepens his visual puzzle by placing
one illusion next to the other. Eerily palpable hard corroded metal pieces and
cubes are torn apart like thin sheets of paper. In some of the works, pieces of
metal seem to have been peeled off the surface in the most unlikely fashion.
Once again by means of utilizing digitally controlled technology, in this case,
a laser cutting machine, to produce an accurate rendering of ripped paper
edges, Fu Shuai implants a visual cue that exposes yet another precisely
crafted visual inconsistency.
By establishing such contradictory physical and
conceptual relationships between various aspects of his work, Fu Shuai places
it in an intermediate position between two- and the three-dimensional world,
between painterly and sculptural realm, referring to it as 2 ½ D.
Not only speaking from the stance of portrayed
three-dimensionality and materiality but also deliberating on the technical and
physical qualities, none of Fu Shuai’s works are entirely flat. Due to the
distance that sets them away from the wall, most of the works expand beyond the
borders of the flat surface producing a shadow on the physical space around
them. In those works that don’t, as a means of defying the flatness of the picture
plane, Fu Shuai incorporates 3D printed elements that look like nails hammered
through the surface of the picture.
The 2 ½ D that Fu Shuai refers to in his work mirrors the
intermediate state of reality that surrounds us in the world outside of his creations.
If you were to see Fu Shuai’s works scattered in the vicinity of an abandoned
factory, most likely you would have walked right past them, habitually
regarding them as industrial debris that fit so naturally to the setting.
Carefully designed illusions and revealing cues would have gone unnoticed and
unappreciated. This hypothetical situation perfectly explains the nature of
people's behavior in a modern-day world.
Our perception of reality is heavily based on our vision
that in the process of evolution has become extremely discriminating. A quick
glance allows us to pick up information essential for survival and move through
the world efficiently. But what if the environment that surrounds us is
permeated with things that routinely mimic textures, flavors, and appearances
of other things. Every one of us has a little bit of Fu Shuai inside conjuring
up illusions of spaces and materials in areas we inhabit, masquerading our
bodies and faces with clothes and make-up, producing food that tastes and looks
like something else, utilizing technology to alter virtually anything to
project the intensified version of reality
to the world, flinging aside the authentic and
genuine.
Fu Shuai’s uncanny
representations shed light on the illusionist’s world of effects and appearances
outside of his creations. The perplexing visual and cognitive experiences
evoked by his work are purifying. Not only does the artist question the
boundaries between the painted world and ours, but by identifying complex
relationships within his work he lets us become more discerning and aware of
the complexities of our world that can’t be grasped quickly and take time to
uncover.