
Li Yuan-chia exhibition at the Winsing Art Place
Today we take you to an exhibition on Li Yuan-chia, one of Taiwan’s earliest pioneers in abstract and conceptual art. On view are his works from the 1950s to the 1990s. The exhibition being held in Taipei features a wide range of media, including calligraphy, painting, low-reliefs, and more. FTV reporter Stephany Yang takes us in for a look!
On view are works by Li Yuan-chia that trace four phases of his career. His most celebrated pieces encompass painting, photography, installation, and poetry—each revolving around the symbol he created called the “cosmic point.” The cosmic point symbolized the origin and end of all things. He worked with four colors, each carrying deep symbolic meaning. Black signified both the beginning and the end, red stood for blood and life, gold symbolized nobility, and white represents purity.
Jenny Yeh
Winsing Art Place Founder
He studied art in Taiwan and then he moved to Italy, and ended up in the UK. So actually, he only stayed in Taiwan for a very short period of time, but he was influenced a lot by his teacher, Li Chun-shan. This is why it makes his works so interesting. I think every work is a highlight but I especially like this work called "Pushing." It has a lot of collage, photographs, and even the artist wrote the poetry on the work. Most of his works are around the 1960s. Think about it, the early age of 1960, using a lot of brush abstract paintings into a modern artworks.
Li is an artist, poet, and curator. He is regarded as a trailblazer among Chinese artists for adopting conceptual art, weaving together Eastern philosophical traditions with Western abstraction. Throughout his career, he studied in Taipei, and worked in Bologna, London, and Cumbria, where he transformed a farmhouse into an art space, holding a variety of exhibitions. The exhibition in Taipei features his works spanning from calligraphy, painting, low reliefs, interactive works, hand-tinted photographs, and archival materials.
Jenny Yeh
Winsing Art Place Founder
I have been collecting Li Yuan-chia’s work for almost 10 years. I think this is a very good time to show Li Yuan-chia’s works to the public because at the end of this year, at the end of October, there is the Taipei Biennale. There is going to a lot of curators, directors, and artists going to visit Taiwan. I think this is a very good time to show Chinese, Taiwanese artists to the world.
Li’s works will be on display at the Winsing Art Place until Jan. 18.
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2025-10-08