The exhibition "The Generational Symptom" presents Ronnie Jiang's work as a visual analysis of the contradictions and identity fatigue that define our era. Through two interconnected series, the artist does more than depict reality; she extracts its fever, tension, and ambivalence.
The "Symptom" here is the visible manifestation of a profound societal unease, that of a generation torn between the legacy of simplified imagery (cartoons, pop culture) and the raw complexity of a world in crisis (identity, environment, digital vanity).
The series:
A. Figurative Destructuralism: Morphology of Crisis
Figurative Destructuralism is not simply hybridization, but a protocol of alteration. The artist subjects the classical model to a programmed tearing, superimposing classical anatomy onto fragments of burlesque figures. These “fragments of a new story” attest to the porous boundaries between allegory and the digitized everyday. The figure thus emerges as a psychological palimpsest, revealing the layers of alienation and identity reconstruction.
B. Social Reflection: The Contemporary Bestiary
In contrast, the Social Reflections series broadens the scope to the realm of sociological observation. It uses the bestiary as an allegorical device to decipher the mechanisms of vanity, consumerism, and collective anxiety. These compositions, often saturated and ironic, function as modern vanitas paintings, where the burlesque nature of the figures underscores the absurdity of contemporary social dynamics.
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