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i've always been a weeper at the cinema: Faye Wei Wei

past exhibition
2 October - 2 November 2019 Gallery Exhibitions
  • Text
  • Works
  • Installation Views
  • Press
  • News
Text

Cob Gallery are pleased to present Faye Wei Wei’s second London solo exhibition- ‘I Have Always Been A Weeper At The Cinema’, featuring a new suite of paintings, created over a summer in Berlin. Filled with iconography and steeped in the romanticism that Wei Wei’s paintings have become known for, the new works are inspired by seduction and the experience of love, personal memory and, more directly they emote the rhythms found in poetry. Meanwhile, the exhibition features a group of large scale floral paintings - which energetically fluctuate between the figurative and the abstracted. These pictures are inspired by the summer. They arise, still wet from the ocean’s spray and they reach out from the silver screen. Do Enjoy.
The following text is written by the artist’s brother Alastair Wong.
***
I remember Faye’s delight when I gave her my tooth. Hers were cruelly kept in the hospital and since she had none of my milk, something of my wisdom would have to do.
Around the same time I went to Portugal—you know how summer days merge into one and how the specifics of time recess in the memory—I have always been afraid of the sea.
I am a poor swimmer, yes, but it is more than that. The sea represents so much infinitude that I am afraid it’s cool, saline embrace will seduce and carry my ego, my self away. I had been feeling braver of late and so I fell for the sea, hoping it would hold me in turn. The touch of the Atlantic was not so gentle but, after gasping for air, it felt good; to be suspended in the unknowable otherness of the Sea. The water threatened every pore but I was still here and was still myself. And, as I lingered in the sea, I thought of everything that made me whole. 
Faye had fallen in love and moved to Berlin to amass a trove of it. From this summer’s harvest, Faye has gorged upon the fruit of ripe feeling. She has savoured the abundant, liquor taste on the tickle of her toothsome tongue.
Though we were now apart by some distance, I thought how Faye might be, even then, in water herself; immersed in the coolness of one of Berlin’s lakes which hum with life and with laughter for these little months.
Falling in love is something like the trepidation I felt toward the sea. You dip your toe in and decide the water’s too cold but—once you immerse yourself—you realise it isn’t so scary, the water’s fine and you are more yourself for your connection to others.
The opposite is true of the cinema; going to the cinema is easy.
The cushy chairs hug you in their velveteen and, for a brief time, your ego escapes —if the film is good and true— into connection and into the stories of others. We weep in empathy and, perhaps, forget the self.
Faye likens this tenderness to, ‘the infinite duvet of the canvas’ surface’, a space of potential, and of, ‘stuffing feathers into a pillow’. Her feelings apparate before you as a painting—a four-poster bed.
Of course, she hopes you’ll get a good night’s rest but then, what dreams may come? Escape into sleep and the land that there unfolds is yours and yours alone.
If we stretch our arms out entirely, the span of our body is finite but love can stretch from sea to silver screen and further still. The sharp fall into salty tears, the duvet of the film and all that lies between.
***
Two Boys fall,
over and over each other
trying to find the waterfall they once saw
not so sure if—
they’ve seen it before.

Works
  • Faye Wei Wei A Portrait Of A Flower As A Young Bud, 2019 Oil on linen 1830 x 1370 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    A Portrait Of A Flower As A Young Bud, 2019
    Oil on linen
    1830 x 1370 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei Henry (The Sun Stuck To Our Skin), 2019 Oil on linen 1830 x 1370 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    Henry (The Sun Stuck To Our Skin), 2019
    Oil on linen
    1830 x 1370 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei Every Winter Comes Round Again And I Forget How Cold It Feels, 2019 Oil on linen 1830 x 1370 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    Every Winter Comes Round Again And I Forget How Cold It Feels, 2019
    Oil on linen
    1830 x 1370 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei Faye, 2019 Oil on linen 1200 x 600 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    Faye, 2019
    Oil on linen
    1200 x 600 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei Frederik, 2019 Oil on linen 1200 x 600 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    Frederik, 2019
    Oil on linen
    1200 x 600 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei, For Ana Mendieta (How Much Can A Flower Break Your Heart), 2019
    Faye Wei Wei, For Ana Mendieta (How Much Can A Flower Break Your Heart), 2019
  • Faye Wei Wei Crying In Public, Again , 2019 Oil on canvas 1050 x 900 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    Crying In Public, Again , 2019
    Oil on canvas
    1050 x 900 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei Icarus The Sun On Your Back , 2019 Oil on canvas 310 x 240 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    Icarus The Sun On Your Back , 2019
    Oil on canvas
    310 x 240 mm
  • Faye Wei Wei This Golden Yesterday's Sleep Upon The Iris, 2019 Oil on linen 1830 x 1370 mm
    Faye Wei Wei
    This Golden Yesterday's Sleep Upon The Iris, 2019
    Oil on linen
    1830 x 1370 mm
Installation Views
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 1 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 2 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 4 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 3 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 5 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 11 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 7 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 6 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 9 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 8 Copy
  • Faye Wei Wei Installation 10 Copy
Press
  • Faye Wei Wei

    The Los Angeles Review of Books , October 30, 2019
  • Faye Wei Wei at Cob Gallery

    Rebecca Storm, The Editorial Magazine , October 26, 2019
  • I've Always Been A Weeper At The Cinema

    WALL STREET INTERNATIONAL , October 15, 2019
  • Artist Faye Wei Wei’s new show is about falling in love in Berlin

    Gunseli Yalcinkaya, DAZED, October 11, 2019
  • Faye Wei Wei’s Transporting Paintings, In Her Own Words

    Belle Hutton, AnOther, October 10, 2019
  • Witchy Films, Frieze and Face Gym: Daisy Hoppen’s October To Do List

    Daisy Hoppen, AnOther, October 4, 2019
News
  • Faye Wei Wei | Hettie Judah, Faye Wei Wei, Christabel MacGreevy and Polly Stenham in conversation | Frieze London 2019

    Faye Wei Wei | Hettie Judah, Faye Wei Wei, Christabel MacGreevy and Polly Stenham in conversation | Frieze London 2019

    5 Oct 2019 October 5, 2019
    Cob Gallery curates a panel talk exploring the changing politics of female creativity in the arts, hosted by art critic Hettie Judah, and featuring artist...
    Read more
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