Xie Nanxing
Fugitive Figuration.
Paintings 1994 - 2026

Curated by Clémentine Deliss

 

“Figuration is not an imitation of the real, a copy of what exists, a reproduction of the visible. Rather, it is an evocation of that which should be, a means of rendering perceptible qualities, situations, and beings that matter to us.” (Philippe Descola, 2021)


Fugitive Figuration traces the practice of Xie Nanxing from his iconic works of the 1990s to his most recent paintings from 2026. The exhibition acts both as an introduction and an appraisal of the exceptional position he holds in contemporary Chinese and international art. For the first time, nine paintings from six different series are brought into conversation with one another. Together, they incite dreams and analysis in equal measure, revealing the different morphologies of figuration that have emerged in his practice over the last thirty years.

Xie’s paintings are essentially filmic even if he deploys no time-based media. With their scenic quality, they incite the viewer to submerge themselves in a multilayered, visual narrative. This effect is particularly pronounced in untitled (No. 5), from 2003, the last work in a seminal series in which he painted each member of his family, including himself, lying prostrate on the floor of his studio. Only, in three of these works, there is no one to be found. Sensory and panoramic in scale, Xie has painted the dissolution of figuration, its final escape. As with his paintings from 1994, and those of 1999 exhibited at the 48th Venice Biennale, we become witnesses to situations and dramas performed in the home in an atmosphere loaded with sinister potential. Xie’s figuration is hidden in plain sight, drawing the viewer into unexpected scenarios, at times tinted with supressed cruelty, but also romanticism and humour.

Take Portrait of an Equal Sign, No. 3, 2026 – it could be a scene out of Jules et Jim (1962), François Truffaut’s acclaimed film of the Nouvelle Vague. A figure in semi-undress – the artist – dialogues blindly with his second self, also headless, while a female mannikin stands nearby in a tailored suit, immobile and similarly acephalous. Xie melts the environment with the person. Roles are played out in a staged emporium of nineteenth century French paintings à la Gustave Courbet, Japanese tiger imagery, Victorian bedposts, silky dresses and decorative objects. It is a wry parody of the market and the art historical clichés that repeatedly flood the artist’s world. Xie gracefully spins the scene with urban drag so as to trigger sensations of desire in the viewer. He is a painter of ambiguity. If at times his figures are humiliated and debased, they can be equally camp and sexy, diffident and rough-edged. There is fast and dirty in his paintings too, like the scene with the motorcycle riders who jam through the camouflage of green undergrowth somewhere in a suburb of Beijing (Untitled, No. 8, 2025). Here, the fugitive in figuration offers a method for veiling and unveiling lived realities through painting.

June 12 – August 29, 2026
Galerie Urs Meile, Zurich Ankerstrasse

Opening:
Friday, June 12, 2026, 6.00 – 9.00pm
 


Opening hours

Wednesday – Friday, 11 –18h
Saturday, 11 – 17h