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GUAN WEI, born 1957, Chinese, Australian, THE LAST SUPPER, 1995, synthetic polymer paint on thirteen canvases SIGNED: each signed with initials lower right: G.W. each numbered verso DIMENSIONS: 87.0 x 46.0 cm each 87.0 x 598.0 cm overall PROVENANCE: Sherman Galleries, Sydney Private collection, New South Wales EXHIBITED: Guan Wei Recent Work, Sherman Galleries, Sydney, 28 September 21 October 1995 (illus. in exhibition catalogue and back cover) Guan Wei The Last Supper, Tokyo Gallery, Tokyo, 27 October 14 November 1997 (illus. in exhibition catalogue) Guan Wei Nesting, or The Art of Idleness 1989 1999, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, 4 June 8 August 1999 LITERATURE: Jones, E., Spirit-Man Guan Wei, Art and Australia, vol. 33, no. 3, Autumn 1996, pp. 431 432 RELATED WORK: The Last Supper, lithograph, 37.0 x 105.5 cm, in the collections of Queensland Art Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, and Griffith University Art Collection, Brisbane © courtesy of Guan Wei Guan Wei is represented by Martin Browne Contemporary, Sydney and Arc One Gallery, Melbourne. ESSAY: Composed of thirteen panels cropped to feature only the torsos of Guan Weis stylised beings seated at a large banquet table, The Last Supper, 1995, is a key work from a pivotal period in the artists career. A leading figure of a group of Chinese émigré artists resulting from the cultural diaspora post-1989, Guan Wei is famous for having created a syncretic visual vocabulary through which to present his ideas to an Australian audience. Guan Weis paintings are windows into a parallel universe, where his androgynous demi-gods navigate unchartered physical and cosmic territories, struggling to make sense of the curious array of artefacts laid before them. Witty allegories of the contentious political issues of our time, Guan Weis paintings escape easy categorisation, instead providing multiple avenues for interpretation. Rather than presenting a humorous reinterpretation of an episode from the Christian gospel, The Last Supper is an expression of Guan Weis social conscience, a meditation on the future of humanity; a feature of the artists mature artworks. During the 1990s, Guan Weis works were inspired by concerns about technological development and the potential consequences and implications for humankind. Similar in format and composition to other works of the same period (such as The Efficacy of Medicine, acquired by National Gallery of Australia in 2000) The Last Supper shows haloed beings gesticulating theatrically, ignoring the array of potentially poisonous cocktails before them and toying instead with a red and blue capsule.1 A stylistic device linking each portrait, the capsule is also a recurrent symbol in other works by the artist, such as Treasure Hunt II, 1995. In 2006, Guan Wei explained to Deborah Hart, now Head Curator of Australian Art at the NGA, the meaning of this symbol: In each painting, the capsules are a symbol of medicine and drugs. They represent a new substance produced from ancient alchemy and modern high technology. They could save lives, but could also cause death. It is up to us.2 Guan Weis syncretism weaves together elements from Western and Oriental art and culture, in particular Taoist philosophy. In addition to bestowing his figures with but a single Taoist outward-looking eye, it has also been suggested that the capsule is a representation of the Taoist pill of immortality, elegantly linking this artists world with the Christian message of resurrection and creating a hybrid vision rather than a simple transliteration. 3 1. In addition to classic signs of poison, such as the skull and crossbones atop a swizzle stick in the 10th panel, many of the other objects on the banquet table could be either venomous or poisonous, such as a frog, lizard, flowers and seeds. 2. Hart, D., Looking for home: The fables of Guan Wei, Art and Australia, vol. 40, no. 4, Sydney, Winter 2003, p. 623 3. Jones, E., Spirit Man: Guan Wei, Art and Australia, vol. 33, no. 3, Sydney, Autumn 1996, p. 431 LUCIE REEVES-SMITH
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