How Chinese Artist Pu Yingwei Uses International Travel as a Form of Artistic Experimentation

Pu continues to redefine what it means to be a Chinese artist in a globalized society.

Pu Yingwei, Stars Fall: Putin’s Final Battle (2022). Courtesy of Hive Center for Contemporary Art.

Fresh off a landmark solo show at He Art Museum in Beijing, Pu Yingwei (蒲英玮) continues to redefine what it means to be a Chinese artist in a globalized society.

The exhibition “New Century Encyclopedia” spanned the practices of painting, sculpture, and animation, constituting a “personal archive offered to the future” informed by the artist’s travels across three continents.

Large colorful mural featuring abstract patterns, nature-inspired designs, and vibrant green and yellow tones, displayed in a modern gallery with a minimalistic white interior.

Pu Yingwei, Green Planet: Panorama of Human (2021–2022). Courtesy of Hive Center of Contemporary Art.

Pu’s densely layered pictorial surfaces reveal forms, textures, and texts that evoke the space-age monuments of the Balkan Peninsula, the slums of Nairobi, and the shelled high-rises of Kyiv. Yet his cosmopolitan spirit is palpably grounded in the Chinese canon, as exemplified by his ongoing series “Today’s Changing Seasons,” in which he adapts the millennia-old six principles of Chinese painting to the millennial consciousness.

Expansive library bookshelf filled with neatly arranged books in various colors, displayed in a bright, modern room with wooden floors and large windows.

Pu Yingwei, World Library (2024). Courtesy of Hive Center for Contemporary Art.

Likewise, Pu’s imposing yet precarious World Library (2024), comprised of one thousand glazed ceramic books, is at once expansive and specific, representing an accumulation of universal knowledge in a quintessentially East Asian medium.

Textile artwork featuring draped fabric in camouflage patterns, with bold golden text quoting a historical speech, displayed on a white wall in a gallery.

Pu Yingwei, Kintsukuroi-Camouflage (2020). Courtesy of Hive Center for Contemporary Art.

Pu’s masterful syncretism is also displayed in earlier works like Kintsukuroi-Camouflage (2020), a “kind of anthropomorphic fabric” onto which the artist has gilded the words of Martin Luther King Jr. in a defamiliarized script.

Born in 1989, Pu Yingwei received a BFA from Sichuan Fine Arts Institute in 2013 and his MFA from L’École nationale supérieure des beaux-arts de Lyon in 2018. Currently represented by Hive Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing, he has previously mounted solo shows at Galerie Sator in Paris and West Bund in Shanghai. The artist has also recently participated in the China International Art Biennial, and the showcase Counterpoints: Focus China at Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden.

Pu was the recipient of a 2012 John Moores Painting Prize and was named a Gen.T Leader of Tomorrow by Tatler Asia.

Portrait of a person seated in a creative studio, wearing a purple blazer and glasses, illuminated by dramatic lighting with vibrant artwork in the background.

Pu Yingwei. Courtesy of Hive Center for Contemporary Art.

“When I contemplate art, I contemplate freedom,” Pu said. “At this juncture in my life, both my existence and the essence of my art are still in the process of formation. These recent years of traveling around the globe have served as an experiment in thought and stance, endeavoring to weave together themes of individuality and politics into my journey of perception, contemplation, exploration, and expression.”

Explore more of Pu Yingwei’s recent work presented by Hive Center for Contemporary Art.