Blindspot Gallery is proud to announce that Wang Tuo has been selected as the winner of the Sigg Prize 2023.
Wang interweaves Chinese modern history, cultural archives, fiction and mythology into speculative narratives. Equating his practice to novel writing, he stages an intervention in historical literary texts and cultural archives to formulate stories that blur the boundaries of time and space, reality and imagination. His work spans across film, painting and drawing, to construct multidimensional chronologies. Embracing a uniquely Chinese hauntology, Wang proposes “pan-shamanization” as an entry point to unravel the suppressed and untreated memories of 20th century China. Through historical inquiry, Wang’s works, often unsettling and dramatic, disentangle collective unconsciousness and historical traumas.
His video seriesThe Northeast Tetralogy (2018-2021), on view at the Sigg Prize 2023 exhibition, presents the similar fates of multiple protagonists who occupy different time periods across four chapters. Together, these four chapters blend historical and fictional events to offer perspectives on how we evaluate histories that seem to repeat themselves. Alongside works by five other shortlisted artists, the Sigg Prize 2023 exhibition at M+ will be showcased until 14 Jan 2024.
The Sigg Prize, a program established by M+ in 2018, was formerly the Chinese Contemporary Art Award (CCAA), founded by Dr Uli Sigg in China in 1998. Open to artists born or working in the Greater China region, the Sigg Prize recognizes important artistic practices in the region and aims to highlight and promote diverse works on an international scale.
Wang Tuo’s (b. 1984, Changchun, China) recent solo exhibition “Wang Tuo: The Second Interrogation” was presented at Blindspot Gallery, Hong Kong in 2023. His other solo exhibitions were held at UCCA Center for Contemporary Art (Beijing, 2021) and Taikang Space (Beijing, 2016). Wang also participated in group exhibitions at Aranya Art Center (Beidaihe, 2023), M+ (Hong Kong, 2023), KADIST (San Francisco, 2022), He Art Museum (Guangdong, 2022), Song Art Museum (Beijing, 2022), Incheon Art Museum (Incheon, 2021), National Museum of Singapore (Singapore, 2021), OCAT Institute (Beijing, 2021), Power Station of Art (Shanghai, 2021), Shanghai Duolun Museum of Modern Art (Shanghai, 2021), National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (Seoul, 2020), Serpentine Gallery (London, 2020), Today Art Museum (Beijing, 2019), Kunsthalle Baden-Baden (Baden-Baden, 2019), Julia Stoschek Collection (Düsseldorf, 2018), Zarya Center for Contemporary Art (Vladivostok, 2018), and Queens Museum (New York, 2017), among others.
Wang is the winner of the Sigg Prize 2023. He was selected for the OCAT x KADIST Emerging Media Artist Residency Program in 2020 and was artist-in-residence at Queens Museum in New York from 2015 to 2017. Furthermore, he was awarded the 10th Three Shadows Photography Award in 2018.
Wang currently lives and works in Beijing.