SAN FRANCISCO, January 28, 2011 - Chinese artist Xu Bing, recipient of a MacArthur Foundation "genius" award in 1999, unveiled a fascinating new direction in his most recent works before a packed ...
Join Asia Society Texas to celebrate the opening of our new exhibition Xu Bing: Word Alchemy. The show assembles more than 50 of Xu Bing’s most important paintings, videos, sculptures, drawings, ...
Artist Xu Bing's first feature film Dragonfly Eyes tells a story of love and obsession through footage culled entirely from videos uploaded to Chinese streaming sites. Now, Xu has premiered his first ...
The pioneer generation gets to see the continued relevance of their work, and younger artists get to know their own history.” ...
Xu Bing, a 46-year-old Chinese expatriate who is one of his country's most successful exports, makes ridiculous art. Or maybe he makes very clever art. Either way, he makes important, fascinating, ...
Phoenix at MASS MoCA (all photographs by the author for Hyperallergic unless otherwise noted) First conceived and constructed in China, Xu Bing’s paired “Phoenix” sculptures have flown the coop and ...
Château Mouton Rothschild has unveiled its 2018 vintage label, featuring an original calligraphic artwork by Xu Bing, a leading Chinese printmaker and calligrapher. The artwork illustrates “Mouton ...
Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Reactivating the Tradition -- In Dialogue with Xu Bing -- Audience Participation in Xu Bing's Works -- Revisiting Ink Art -- Art as Mellorism -- Xu Bings Phoenix: ...
Artist Xu Bing discusses his practice with curator Zoe S. Kwok. See Xu Bing, the internationally acclaimed artist and MacArthur Fellow–winner, in conversation with Zoe S. Kwok, the Museum's Nancy and ...
Monkeys Grasp for the Moon is a suspended sculpture designed specifically for the Sackler Gallery by Chinese artist Xu Bing (born 1955), as part of an October 2001 exhibition of his work titled Word ...
“We’re going to be engaging in a dialogue,” contemporary Chinese artist Xu Bing said (translated by Joy Chen to English). So opened Bing’s discussion titled “Dragonfly Eyes: What Counts as Art Today,” ...