FILTER
BY DATE
BY EVENT TYPE
BY DISTRICT
Clear
Opening Reception
SU XIAO BAI: NIAO NIAO

24 Mar, 2025

2:00 pm – 8:00 pm

Hong Kong—Pearl Lam Galleries is delighted to present Niao Niao, a solo exhibition in collaboration with the Su Xiaobai Foundation, showcasing the works of renowned artist Su Xiaobai from 24 March–15 May. This exhibition, coinciding with Art Basel Hong Kong, is exemplary of the gallery’s long-term focus on abstraction.

Su Xiaobai pursued his postgraduate studies at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in the 1980s and was taught by Konrad Klapheck. He embraces abstraction by consciously stripping his work of narrative and explicit meaning. Known for experimenting with lacquer, a resin-based material traditionally used for making lacquerware that can be dated back to the 5th millennium BC, Su is drawn by its unpredictable characteristics. His core interest is to realise physical forms that are inherent to the material and diverse properties of lacquer.

Niao Niao [裊裊] is a new series of paintings that Su has been steadily working on over the past two years. Niao in Chinese literally means being adrift and reflects the artist’s own displacement. “I have no hometown, but I embrace it,” says Su, highlighting how he comes to terms with the psychological solitude. His personal histories are often interwoven with the history of painting itself, giving weight to both material and non-objective expression but without conforming to specific traditional or cultural norms.

“Niao”, in Su’s words, “is an onomatopoeic word that evokes the image of smoke gently rising and curling. This series of work aims to capture a lingering sound that extends into a melancholic echo, much like lingering emotions, with a dense nebulous presence that drifts, permeates, and eventually dissipates.” Furthermore, the concept of Niao Niao signifies the intellectual independence and integrity of a generation of Chinese artists who have been largely left out of the mainstream narrative formed by post-war debates about modernism, minimalism, abstract expressionism, and art informel.

Inspired by old roof tiles from traditional houses in Fujian province after his return to China from Germany in 2003, the shapes of tile are a recurring motif in Su’s oeuvre. The process of making a painting is labour intensive. Individual artworks begin with a curvilinear and meticulously crafted base structure made with wood, plastic, and linen. The lacquer, mixed with turpentine, damar resin, stone powder, metal powders, and synthetic mineral pigments, undergoes a process of drying that produces a crystalline surface reminiscent of glaze. Su is always cognizant of how the edges of the painting and the work’s concave and convex surfaces affect our bodily association with space, literally and metaphorically. The unpredictable interplay of drying stages, resulting in diverse textures, inspires Su’s ongoing experimentation. Embracing both failure and discovery have become integral parts of his process.

Colours are more than visual elements; they are vessels of history and narrative as well. Su believes that colour, also a material, possesses a secondary essence, and he persistently explores new approaches to infuse his monochromatic works with subtleties. He seeks out pigments with storied pasts, such as Tyrian purple, or endows them with hidden personal meanings. He uses lacquer that has been sun-cured for half a year, blending it with pigment powder. The mixture is then meticulously milled with a grinding machine until it reaches a set consistency. The painting process involves multiple coats of clear lacquer, each applied over a few days, with the canvas exposed to the light by day and placed in darkness by night. The pieces are then left to cure in a shaded room for several days, allowing them to develop a luminous glow over time. Su is not interested in depicting objects or figures with his work but actively engages with the concept of existence itself. There is no determinate order; what is left in a painting has to do with ontology, and the works complete themselves based on their own order. Su claims, “All paintings are real and are responsible for their own existence; what I care about is the possibility for painting to exist independent of itself.”

This exhibition is broken down into two distinctive sections to shed light on the ever-changing meaning behind Su’s artworks and, more importantly, to express longing for artistic freedom. With reference to the landscape design of classical Chinese gardens in Suzhou, the first section utilises different layering of space to encourage audiences to become more aware of their own sense of movement relative to their perception of an artwork. A small painted broken tile, Floating Tile–5 (2024), located on the front wall alludes to a temporary dwelling; a green painting, Floating Grass–1 (2024), is hung in proximity, suggesting nature and growth. Audiences then enter individual compartments to look at different groupings of grey paintings, Floating Sand (2024), of varying sizes. The intention is to accentuate visual qualities of absorption, diffusion, and containment. A muted white Floating Flake (2025) is hung next to Floating Grass–3 (2024) with rich textures to convey remnants from the past that have withstood the weathering of history. In section two, along a corridor conducive for perspectival readings of artworks, we see a large blue diptych painting titled Floating Haze (2025) coupled with Floating Light (2025) , a drip painting, on the end wall. Floating Haze is an abstract expression of ravines and mountains shrouded in clouds and mist. The interplay of blue and white evokes clouds, water, and the movement of glaciers. Installed on the opposite wall are works that are slightly more painterly in nature, as Su attempts to do away with depicting imagery with these pieces. Inside a semi-enclosed room, a large blue work with unique curvatures, Floating Beam, is used to stage a physical compression for audiences to observe more closely the subtle changes of the marks on the painted surface, as if time can come to a standstill.

Pearl Lam Galleries remains a leader in encouraging dialogue between the East and West and fostering cross-cultural exchange. Alongside the Hong Kong group presentation featuring Su Xiaobai’s work, the gallery will also present an exhibition by Michal Korman at its Shanghai space, underscoring its dedication to promoting groundbreaking art that transcends borders.
Pearl Lam Galleries Hong Kong

Address: G/F, Ruttonjee House, Ruttonjee Centre, 3–11 Duddell St., Central

Opening Hours: Mon–Sat 10am–7pm

Phone: +852 2522 1428

Website: pearllam.com