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Tag Archives: Li Hui

Carlos Cruz-Diez: Environment Chromatic Interferences

Published on ArtSlant. Text by Robin Peckham. Environment Chromatic Interferences: Interactive Space by Carlos Cruz-Diez Guangdong Museum of Art (Hall 9) 38 Yanyu Rd., Ersha Island, Guangzhou 11 September – 31 October 2010 There was a moment in the late 1990s and early 2000s, coinciding roughly with the lifespan of the Post-Sense Sensibility exhibitions, during [...]

Li Hui at Tang Contemporary

First published in ART-iT. Text by Robin Peckham. I have not often bothered hiding my boredom with and occasionally even antipathy for the work of Li Hui, whose experiments with light often appear as uncritical and self-satisfied odes to the dazzling speed of modern technology. As often as not, these take the form of explosively [...]

Light Art in China

The Sculpture of He An, Lam Tung-Pang, and Yu Bogong Text by Robin Peckham Light sculpture is a relatively well-established mode in international contemporary art, existing somewhere in the territory between a sculptural medium and a conceptual movement. Growing out of minimalism proper, its best-known practitioners generally work with neon tubing as the preferred material [...]