Nine of Hearts, Nine of Spades is a lithograph by Zhang Xiaogang from 'The Storyteller's Enchantments of Zhang Xiaogang' which comes as a limited edition of 132 rare books. Inspired by family photos from the Cultural Revolution period, as well as the European tradition of surrealism, Zhang Xiaogang’s lithographs engage with the notion of identity within the Chinese culture of collectivism. Based on his old family photographs from the Cultural Revolution as the basic framework, through this series, the artist attempts to document the scarred memory of the previous generations, moving away from Western expressionistic style and returning to the roots of the Chinese history. From a limited edition of 130, this piece is signed and numbered.
Need Help?
Ships from Switzerland, customs charges may be applied
Artwork Details
Lithograph
Size: Signed and numbered by the artist No apparent condition issues
Shipping & Returns
This artwork ships from an archive seller in Switzerland
Our archive is sourced from our community of vetted galleries and collectors to offer buyers ultra-rare artworks no longer available on the open market.
Orders can be returned within 14 days of receipt by emailing hello@artrepublic.com. For exclusions and details read our full returns policy.
Please note that your order may be subject to import duties and fees upon delivery, depending on your shipping destination.
Featured In:
Zhang Xiaogang is a figurative painter from China, known for investigating the concept of ‘family’ and notions of identity in China. His eerie portraits are often painted in greyscale and border the line between animation and traditionalism, using his portraiture to question the notions of memory and family dynamics.
Zhang Xiaogang is a figurative painter from China, known for investigating the concept of ‘family’ and notions of identity in China. His eerie portraits are often painted in greyscale and border the line between animation and traditionalism, using his portraiture to question the notions of memory and family dynamics.
Xiaogang’s work is inspired by traditional family photos and the European Surrealist movement, using these influences in his own artwork to portray themes of otherness within his own Asian culture. We love how Xiaogang’s figures are generic and nameless, allowing the viewer to transpose their own ideas of the family unit onto Xiaogang’s subjects. Xiaogang’s childhood was shaped by the Cultural Revolution in 1966, when the artist’s parents were forced to leave their government positions and join a “study camp” in the country. This left Xiaogang and his three brothers alone. After the collapse of the Cultural revolution a decade later, Xiaogang was accepted into the Sichuan Institute of Fine Arts in Chongqing. His career excelled from there and his work has now been featured in more than 200 group exhibitions such as the Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World exhibition in 2017 at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, the Practice and Exchange exhibition at Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing in 2018, and the Guangzhou Triennial in China in 2002 and 2005.