Wu Yi's latest solo show“Love in Midsummer”is on display at Tang Contemporary Art

TEXT:CAFA ART INFO    DATE: 2025.9.17

01 Exhibition View of Wu Yi Love in Midsummer.jpgExhibition View of Wu Yi: Love in Midsummer

Tang Contemporary Art presents artist Wu Yi's latest solo exhibition, “Love in Midsummer,” at its Beijing 2nd Space. Curated by Cui Cancan, the exhibition features more than 50 works from Wu Yi's latest series, “Peach,” “Imitation of ‘The Legend of the White Snake,’” and “Prague.”Wu Yi’s paintings are showcased among a chic and refreshing tone in soft blue, light green and pale pink that brings coolness in midsummer, which harmonized with his works that integrate classical Chinese elements and contemporary emotions. With “love” as the motif of this exhibition, Wu Yi conveys an elegant sentiment as light and enduring as an essay. 

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04 Exhibition View of Wu Yi Love in Midsummer.jpgExhibition View of Wu Yi: Love in Midsummer


Midsummer Love


By Curator Cui Cancan

I.

In Chekhov’s short story The Kiss, a curious tale of love unfolds: at a ball in Tsarist Russia, a young officer wanders into a dimly lit room. A woman, as if she had long awaited him, presses a sudden kiss to his cheek. Realizing her mistake, she hastens away. Yet that brief touch leaves an indelible mark. For days he drifts in blissful reverie, until he can no longer resist recounting the moment. He recalls the hurried footsteps, the rustle of silk, the strains of music drifting from beyond the door; the warm, moist touch of lips; the fragrance of poplar, lilac, and rose in the air. He describes much, imagines more, and yet his telling ends swiftly—though he had believed it could last until dawn.

2. Peach, Ink on paper, 150 × 46.8 cm, 2024.jpeg

Peach, Ink on paper, 150 × 46.8 cm, 2024

At times, love is less a story than a sensation: the scent of air, the feel of dampness, the juiciness of summer itself. In Wu Yi’s new works, the “peach” carries this very metaphor. It serves as a token of the tale, a marker of seasonal rhythms and human desire, and a vessel for imagination. Its first association is with the season: each summer, as peaches ripen, they herald midsummer’s arrival. The air grows heavy with rain and humidity, and lives and moods shift accordingly.

5. Peach, Ink on paper, 150 × 46 cm, 2024.jpegPeach, Ink on paper, 150 × 46 cm, 2024

Ancient thought reminds us that “food and desire are of the essence of human nature.” Among the few fruits once available, the peach was one of summer’s great pleasures: admired, tasted, savored in homage to the season. Thus, peaches appear throughout classical paintings and texts. Their distinctive form and flavor stir Wu Yi’s impulse to paint: the shy blush of a bud, the fine down, the supple fullness that recalls the feel of skin. Their taste is exquisite—juicy and tender, best when rinsed in well water, so that cool sweetness runs down the hands.

6. Peach, Ink on paper, 150 × 46.8 cm, 2024.jpeg

Peach, Ink on paper, 150 × 46.8 cm, 2024

In Wu Yi’s art, the peach can be both “seen” and “read.” In Chinese tradition, it holds many meanings: in Daoism, it symbolizes longevity and auspiciousness; in the Classic of Poetry, peach blossoms stand for love—“radiant, resplendent in bloom”; in Tao Yuanming’s Peach Blossom Spring, the peach grove becomes an emblem of seclusion, an idyllic refuge from the turbulent world.

11. Hermit Hanshan and Shide, Ink on paper, 150 × 46.8 cm, 2024.jpeg

Hermit Hanshan and Shide, Ink on paper, 150 × 46.8 cm, 2024

Thus, Wu Yi’s paintings—balanced between blessings of longevity and hints of desire—become refined objects of midsummer. Yet they differ from their ancient counterparts. Their forms are modern: Pop-inspired compositions, the language of flat abstraction. Their emotions are contemporary: shaped by daily experience, Western tales, fleeting metaphors. Wu Yi renders “fortune” and “auspiciousness” not as noisy exuberance, but as quiet joy and gentle peace, with a touch of serene detachment.

Each time a peach ripens, it signals the start of a season. As if, with each summer, bare skin radiates warmth, and love stirs—quickened by the heat of the air, tempered by the cooling sweetness of its taste.

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Exhibition View of Wu Yi: Love in Midsummer

II.

In my memory, The Legend of the White Snake is inseparable from the rains of West Lake—perhaps because of that moment when Xu Xian shelters Bai Suzhen with an umbrella, their reunion after years, marking the beginning of a love story. Or perhaps it is simply that summer in the South is capricious: a sudden downpour can give way to sunshine, and emotions, like the weather, shift unpredictably.

1. Imitation of Legend of the White Snake Part One - The Broken Bridge, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm,2025.jpgImitation of Legend of the White Snake Part One - The Broken Bridge, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm,2025

Beyond the iconic Broken Bridge encounter, the scene that lingers most vividly for me comes from Tsui Hark’s film Green Snake. In it, the monk Fahai attributes his faltering discipline to the two serpents and enlists Xiaoqing to tempt him. The water boils, passion overflows, and Fahai is utterly undone. This fleeting “dew-like love” became, in my imagination, the perfect metaphor for instinct and desire, freedom and restraint, pleasure and longing. Only then did I realize: in childhood, The White Snake seemed a tale of good versus evil; in youth, it revealed itself as a tragedy of love entwined with confinement, desire bound by prohibition.

2. Imitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Two - Fahai's Guidance and the Demonic Aura Surrounding Him, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 2025.jpg Imitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Two - Fahai's Guidance and the Demonic Aura Surrounding HimOil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 20253. Imitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Three - Marry Against All Advice, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 2025.jpgImitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Three - Marry Against All Advice 

Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 2025

Like Wu Yi, generations of readers have grown up with countless versions of The White Snake. It is a quintessential childhood story, and for many, the first glimpse of romance. For Wu Yi, however, illustrated editions carry deeper significance. Illustrations, picture books, and comic strips—among the most accessible and popular forms of art—transmit legend and imagination across time. They also serve as many artists’ first emotional encounters, early inspirations, and even livelihoods.

6. Imitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Six - Searching for Cures to Save Xu Xian, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 2025.jpgImitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Six - Searching for Cures to Save Xu XianOil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 20259. Imitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Nine - The Flooding of Jinshan Temple, Oil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 2025.jpgImitation of Legend of the White Snake Part Nine - The Flooding of Jinshan TempleOil on canvas, 24 × 33 cm, 2025

Wu Yi’s paintings, inspired by late Qing popular prints, place him among the “painters of painters.” It is hard to say whether it is the story or the imagery that moves him most. He approaches the subject as a “first painter,” layering his childhood reading experiences into a style that is fluent, playful, and rhythmically innocent. His brushwork imbues the narrative with renewed theatricality and imaginative vitality. Through simplified abstraction, the meticulously detailed, ancient figures of the original are distilled into a painterly essence, inviting a rereading of images and a layering of texts.

13. Starry Sky, Oil on canvas, 38 × 45.5 cm, 2025.jpgStarry Sky, Oil on canvas, 38 × 45.5 cm, 2025

15. Spring Dawn, Oil on canvas, 38 × 45.5 cm, 2025.jpgSpring Dawn, Oil on canvas, 38 × 45.5 cm, 2025

Even now, it is difficult to tell whether the love stories we read shape our notions of love, or whether our own stories find resonance within them. Perhaps this is why Wu Yi is drawn to these old texts and images: they fuse “first instinct” with “familiar circumstance,” creating the space where artist and inspiration meet.

16. Moisten, Oil on canvas, 45.5 × 38 cm, 2025.jpgMoisten, Oil on canvas, 45.5 × 38 cm, 202519. Spring Joy, Oil on canvas, 38 × 45.5 cm, 2025.jpgSpring Joy, Oil on canvas, 38 × 45.5 cm, 2025

Elsewhere in the gallery, works such as White Moon, Spring Dawn, Celestial Bath, and Nourishing Things present another midsummer vision of the “Celestial Realm.” Drawing from myth as The Legend of the White Snake does, these paintings evoke love and human desire amidst a celestial backdrop. Stars are abstracted into twinkling points across the night sky, the Milky Way stretches like deep blue satin, and mortals and the heavens are intertwined within this poetic space.

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Exhibition View of Wu Yi: Love in Midsummer

III.

On a summer platform, a double-decker train bound for Berlin from Prague waits quietly. Its red doors glow vividly against a gray-blue backdrop. Our gaze is drawn there, and only then do we notice a girl in a white blouse stepping into the carriage. She glances back—reluctant to leave, or savoring one last glimpse of someone’s silhouette? Off-frame, her lover bids farewell. Yet the artist’s perspective aligns almost exactly with the lover’s vantage point—a narrative device characteristic of Wu Yi, who often tells stories from a “protagonist’s” point of view, revealing what an observer sees.

13. The Train from Prague to Berlin, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2025.jpgThe Train from Prague to Berlin, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2025

The scene is set in Prague, in the summer of 2013. That noon, Wu Yi was watching the Czech film Beauty in Distress. Before the closing credits finished, he called his friend Yi Rui, saying he wanted to go to Prague. The trip soon followed, and over the next few years, Wu Yi created a series of works inspired by the city. Events are often connected in subtle, hidden ways. Several summers later, a memory of Prague’s lazy sunlight and carefree days resurfaced. He opened his old sketches and began anew, giving rise to the “Lovers in Prague” series.

15. Lovers, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2025.jpgLovers, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2025

Compared with the immediacy of his earlier works, this series carries an added layer of memory, hazy and serene, as if tracing the passage of time. The indistinct, uncertain nature of recollection leaves room for imagination. Memory allows events to be reshaped, even idealized. Wu Yi removes the impurities and weight of the scene, letting the story float like a dream. Beneath the arches, shadows soften against the summer glare, suspended in the uncertain, dreamlike stillness of midday. Across the street, under the traffic lights, a woman meets another’s gaze—each carrying her own story, her own private cinema. Lovers appear unbidden in the city’s corners, as if the entire city pulses with romance. Even a solitary subway seems to be waiting for something. Memory can be reworked, events can recur—who says love cannot be found around a city corner? Who says desire cannot awaken behind the blue shutters of a white-walled room? In Wu Yi’s hands, summer longing and Prague lovers merge, forming a poetic chemistry of desire and midsummer.

4. A Walking Woman, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2024.jpgA Walking Woman, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 20247. Memory, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2024.jpgMemory, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2024

Love, wherever and whenever, is a timeless and enduring theme. It is recounted endlessly, yet always fresh in its unfolding. We seek ultimate answers to this desire that both aches and enthralls. Yet in the midsummer craving for peaches, in the ill-fated romance at West Lake from The Legend of the White Snake, and in the ordinary rhythms of couples on Prague streets, fate takes its turn, and love charts its own destiny.

12. The Last Subway, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2025.jpgThe Last Subway, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 202511. Love Letter, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2024.jpgLove Letter, Oil on canvas, 33 × 24 cm, 2024

In The Notebook, the elderly couple in a care home open their diary, striving to hold onto memories of love and desire. Their love once stretched long and vibrant, marked by leaps from a boat into the shimmering lake—yet it was only a summer romance. When the season ends, her heart breaks, and the stories live on only within the pages of the notebook.

Midsummer Night, 2025

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Exhibition View of Wu Yi: Love in Midsummer


About Artist

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Wu Yi was born in Changchun, Jilin in 1966. His ancestral home is Ninghe, Tianjin. He graduated from department of traditional Chinese painting of Central Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied under the professor Lu Chen, receiving his master's degree and stayed for teaching in 1993. He is now the professor of Central Academy of Fine Art. He now lives and works in Beijing.

Since 1994, his works have been exhibited in National Art Museum of China (1994, "Tension Experiment: Expressionist Ink Art Exhibition"); Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, Croatia (2002, "Golden Harvest: Chinese Contemporary Art Exhibition"); National Art Gallery of Malaysia (2004, "Point, Radiation & Penetration: Visual Expression from Ink"); Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Japan (2004, "19th Asian International Art Exhibition"); National Gallery Singapore (2006, "21st Asian International Art Exhibition"); Tokyo University of the Arts (2007, "Ink: The World of Monochrome"); National galerie, Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, Germany (2008, "New Frontiers of Ink: Chinese Contemporary Ink Art Exhibition"); Hamburger Kunsthalle, Germany (2012, "Chinese Modern Ink Art Exhibition"); Louvre Museum, Paris, France (2012, "A Century of Chinese Ink: Carrousel du Louvre Invitational Exhibition"); Saatchi Gallery, London, UK (2012, "Chinese Contemporary Art Exhibition"); Galerie Vaclava Spaly, Prague, Czech Republic (2013, "Prague Summer"); Hong Kong Museum of Art (2013, "Original Dao: New Concepts in Chinese Contemporary Art"); Beijing Hive Center for Contemporary Art (2014, "Free and Unfettered: Wu Yi Solo Exhibition"); Beijing MEBOSPACE (2015, "Artistic Journey - Dunhuang: Wu Yi Solo Exhibition"); Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing (2015, "West Lake: Wu Yi Solo Exhibition"); Torrance Art Museum, USA (2014, "Chinese Modern Art Exhibition"); Jinan Art Museum (2017, "Insight: Wu Yi’s Recent Ink Works"); Beijing MEBOSPACE (2017, "Tea-Picking Song: Wu Yi Solo Exhibition"); Kunsthalle Göppingen, Germany (2018, "Ten Possibilities Beyond Ink"); Shanghai XUN WAY Exhibition Space (2019, "Chart for Cultivating Perfection: Wu Yi Solo Exhibition"); Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong (2021, "Wu Yi: Scenery Portraits"); Song Art Museum (2021, "Wu Yi: Prague");Tang Contemporary Art, Bangkok (2022, "Wu Yi: Diary of the Heart"); Guangdong Museum of Art (2022, "Wu Yi: Aesthetics of Memory"); Beijing Minsheng Art Museum (2022, "Echoes of Civilization: Dunhuang Art Exhibition"); Shanghai ZiWU (2022, "Wu Yi: Text and Painting"); Wuhan Art Museum (Qintai) (2022, "Art as a Link: 2022 Wuhan Biennale"); Guardian Art Center, Beijing (2023, "The 2nd Guardian International Art Book Fair"); AMNUA, Nanjing (2023, "Five Solo Exhibitions within a Group Exhibition: Wu Yi (1981-2022)"); Jingdezhen Ceramic University Art Museum (2023, "Journey of Porcelain: 2023 Jingdezhen International Ceramic Art Biennale"); Wuhan Art Museum (Qintai) (2024, "Ink Discourse: Contemporary Logic of 'Clear and Distant Mountains'—Contemporary Ink Research Series (8th)"); Gongwang Art Museum (2024, "Integration & Dialogue: 2024 Hong Kong-Macau Visual Arts Biennale"); AMNUA, Nanjing (2024, "Forty Years of Chinese Contemporary Ink (1985-2024)"); Chengdu K Gallery (2024, "Towards Renewed 'New Painting' Exhibition"); Hunan Art Museum (2025, "Forty Years of Chinese Contemporary Ink (1985-2024) - Hunan Station"); Wuhan He Art Museum (2025, "Cultivating Truth: Wu Yi Solo Exhibition") and other important art institutions in China and abroad.


About the Exhibition

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Dates: August 23 – October 15, 2025

Venue: Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing 2nd Space

Courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art, edited by CAFA ART INFO.