For thirty years, the Chinese "Zhou Brothers" have used an unusual method to create their abstract pictures: They paint them together. This volume presents their fascinating works.
The book presents a comprehensive selection of works by the brothers Zhou, Shan Zuo (*1952) and Da Huang (*1957). Born in the autonomous Chinese region of Guangxi, they studied art in Shanghai and Beijing and became the best-known young painters of their generation in mainland China during the 1980s. In 1985, they were the first artists ever given the opportunity to exhibit their work - large-scale, primitivist-abstract paintings - on a tour through the five most important art institutions in China, including the National Museum of Art in Beijing and the art museums in Shanghai and Nanjing. Although the brothers have lived and worked in the U.S. since 1986, they have not changed their working approach at all. They develop all of their paintings, prints and sculptures together, communicating without words in what they refer to as "dream dialogues" and responding to both eastern and western influences, themes, and materials.
Exhibition schedule: Elmhurst Art Museum October 9, 2004 - January 9, 2005 Chicago Cultural Center October 16 - December 30, 2004