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SOLO EXHIBITION

Zhou Song

Walking on Thin Ice

Beijing 2nd Space

2025.12.19 - 2026.1.31

Curated by Alan McNairn

Press

Tang Contemporary Art is pleased to present a solo exhibition by artist Zhou Song, titled “Walking on Thin Ice”, at Beijing 2nd Space from December 19, 2025, to January 31, 2026. Curated by Dr. Alan McNairn, the exhibition will feature over 50 works, including paintings, sculptures, and scripts.

 

The artist Zhou Song’s painting does not appear through linear narrative, nor does it depict the landscape of conventional experiences. Rather, it emerges through the lens of “post-humanism” — a multi-layer ecosystem formed by consciousness, media, physical properties, and cosmic scope. Facing the current situation where technic advancement, eco-crisis, and cognitive boundaries continue to re-construct themselves, the human condition is situated on a layer of thin ice that consistently witnesses ruptures, holding a strong sense of instability but continues to form new sensibilities and modes of existence. From his first solo exhibition in Today Art Museum in 2009 to his recent appearances in places such as Osthaus Museum Hagen, Shanghai Powerlong Museum, and Venice Biennale Parallel Exhibition, his work continuously holds a philosophical speculation around the complex relationship between life and cosmos, technology and civilization. His creative narrative can be held as a visual narration of the “discourse around post-humanistic existence”, including not only a delicate inheritance of classical oil painting techniques but more so a sensitive catch of contemporary existential experiences and a futuristic imagination. 

The title Walking on Thin Ice originates from Zhou Song’s homonymous work. In his pictorial space, a pair of giant pants suspends itself above the cold and fragile ice surface, the human subjects are situated in this abnormal “fictional world”, delineating an unstable apocalyptic landscape. Along with their enjoyment of taking control of technology, the human species has to face the deep anxiety brought by nature’s retaliation and the collapse of meaningfulness. The uncanniness brought by this anxiety and surreality is apparent in Enigmatic Realm, a work that measures eight meters in length: the naturalistic tree entangles itself with the artificial pencil, presenting a cosmic ecosystem of multi-layered life apparatuses. Lying under the thin ice is the undetectable “black hole”. The black hole under Zhou’s narrative often appears with entanglements and fragments, in Gravity, Black Hole and Black Hole, it is as if the human and objects are entangled in a continuous falling, penetration, and disintegration, intimately connecting with each other by artificial objects amid the collapsing boundaries. 

Another core aspect of Zhou Song’s practice lies in “the visualization of power”. Whether in Civilization, where structures are bent and layered, or in the installation Advancing, which constructs a walking gait that appears casual yet is in fact rigorous and conceptually charged, his works consistently investigate how images can render the materialization of energy visible. Even in small-scaled works such as The Palm’s Tale, The Knot, and The Gun, there is also the presentation of a disintegrated agency, objects that are detectable in human experiences such as hand, knot, and specific objects all transform into containers where energy folds itself and objects go through the process of metamorphosis. In the meantime, Zhou advances his contemplation of the concept of “nature”. In his “Supernatural” series, he is not depicting a primitive nature that appears in a lyrical form but rather a compositional landscape as a result of technical interference, reconstruction, and even fabrication. An Escape to the Moon no longer centers around macroscopic historic narration, the nature in Post-Nature and New Nature are also no longer the background or object, but a “post-life” apparatus as a result of the crossbreeding between technical and cultural genes. 

In the meanwhile, Zhou is not narrating a pessimistic apocalyptic view only. While unveiling the predicaments, he also keeps a delicate hope and an exploration of inner order using the fragility and uncertainty of candle in works such as Divine Light and Candlelight. Such effort to seek balance is itself the most active response to the condition of “walking on thin ice”, it is for a more delicate and clear-minded progression. Aesthetically speaking, he blends into his work both the bizarre imagination of surrealism and the delicate texture of figurative painting, connecting intellectually the meditation of human-nature relationship in oriental philosophy and the criticism against technical life in western post-humanistic theory. For instance, the work series of “Oil Painting Manuscript” can be held as a record of the artist’s thought experiments, pondering over and over again motifs such as “candlelight”, “super nature”, and “pencil”. 

In the face of the giant power of cosmic structure, the human species is always situated on a layer of thin ice. But it is exactly on this thin layer that we obtain the possibilities of new senses and ways of existence. In Zhou’s cosmic landscape, figure is not a visual form but a concretization of power. Thin ice does not represent danger but the real foundation upon which the modern human species lives. It is a world formed by uncertainty, power, energy, fissions, and latent creativity. It is not only a courage to walk within this world, but also a new cosmic gaze. 

 

Text/Sherry Wang

Works

EXHIBITING WORKS

Walking

Walking

Oil on canvas 200 × 160 cm 2022-2025

Walking on Thin Ice

Walking on Thin Ice

Oil on canvas 400 × 200 cm 2023

The Palm's Tale

The Palm's Tale

Oil on canvas 40 × 40 cm 2025

The Membrane of the Universe

The Membrane of the Universe

Oil on canvas 300 × 224 cm 2024

Anti-Horse

Anti-Horse

Oil on canvas 160 × 128 cm 2025

Advancing

Advancing

Painted stainless steel 180 × 200 × 150 cm 2023

An Escape to the Moon

An Escape to the Moon

Oil on canvas Diameter 160 cm 2022

Gravity

Gravity

, Black Hole, Oil on canvas, 360 × 260 cm, 2023

Balance

Balance

Oil on canvas 100 × 80 cm 2025

Enigmatic Realm

Enigmatic Realm

Oil on canvas 300 × 800 cm 2022-2024

Civilization

Civilization

Oil on canvas 150 × 118 cm 2025

Candlelight

Candlelight

Oil on canvas 200 × 300 cm 2022

Counter Time Travels

Counter Time Travels

Oil on canvas 200 × 130 cm 2014-2017

Dark Consciousness

Dark Consciousness

Oil on canvas 80 × 60 cm 2013

Molding

Molding

Oil on canvas 260 × 210 cm 2024

New Nature

New Nature

Oil on canvas 300 × 200 cm 2022

Post-Nature

Post-Nature

Oil on canvas 160 × 135 cm 2025

Heaven

Heaven

Mirror-polished stainless steel sculpture 26.5 × 26.5 × 61 cm 2022

The Black Hole

The Black Hole

Oil on canvas 160 × 200 cm 2022

The Knot

The Knot

Oil on canvas 150 × 120 cm 2022

Post-Spectacle

Post-Spectacle

Oil on canvas 200 × 160 cm 2025

Artist
Artist
Zhou Song_Artist Portrait.jpeg

Zhou Song

 

Zhou Song, born in 1982 in Jiangxi, graduated in 2006 from the Oil Painting Department of Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts and currently works and lives in Beijing. His solo exhibitions have been held at locations including the Aurora Museum in Shanghai (2025), Powerlong Art Museum in Shanghai (2024), Osthaus Museum Hagen in Germany (2023), Kunstraum Villa Friede in Bonn, Germany (2023), Guardian Art Center in Beijing (2022), How Art Museum in Shanghai (2022), and Today Art Museum in Beijing (2009).

His artworks have also been part of group exhibitions and art projects at various institutions, such as the Museum of Modern Art in Barcelona, Grand Palais in France, Fortezza da Basso in Florence, Kunstraum Villa Friede in Bonn, University of Vienna, European Cultural Center in Venice, YBL Creative Arts Center in Budapest, Jorge Rando Museum in Spain, Sotheby's in Los Angeles, Toronto Art Center in Canada, Palacio Schacht in Santiago, Inca Garcilaso Culture Center in Peru, Museum of Contemporary Art in Panama, Panama Canal Museum, National Gallery of Costa Rica, National Art Museum of Venezuela, National Art Museum of China, Today Art Museum, Guangdong Art Museum, Chongqing Art Museum, Wuhan Art Museum, Chengdu Museum of Modern Art, Shenzhen Guanshanyue Art Museum, He Xiangning Art Museum, among others including NordArt 2023 & 2024, Art Macao 2025, the 59th Venice Biennale parallel exhibition "Personal Structures", the 13th Havana Biennial, the 3rd International Biennial Conference on Robo-Philosophy, the 11th Florence Biennale in Italy, Today Art Museum Documents Exhibition, Chengdu Biennale, Jinan Biennale, etc.

Significant awards include the "Lorenzo International Installation Art Award” at the 11th Florence Biennale (2017), the "Painting Award" at the 5th May 4th International Youth Art Festival (2012), as well as graduating with the first place BFA thesis from the Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts (2006).

His works are collected by institutions and individuals including the Benetton Academic Research Foundation in Italy, CAMLab at Harvard University, Osthaus Museum Hagen, Kunstraum Villa Friede in Bonn, Palacio Schacht in Santiago, ASA Foundation in Panama, Powerlong Art Museum, Today Art Museum, Guardian Art Center, How Art Museum, Beijing Hanwei International Group, Today Classic Group, Artron Enterprise Group, and others.

Curator
Dr. Alan McNairn_Curator Portrait.jpeg

Dr. Alan McNairn

Dr. Alan McNairn, ex-curator of the National Gallery of Canada, ex-dean of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, ex-director of the Canadian New Brunswick Museum. Dr. Alan McNairn has long-term and rich experiences in the fields of art history and museum study. He obtained his PhD of Art History and Archeology in the University of Missouri Columbia, after which he started working in the National Gallery of Canada as a curator, participating in collection research and exhibition planning. In the 1980s, he worked as the director of the Canadian New Brunswick Museum, leading the institution into making profound achievements in its collection work and public education. After this period, he led as the dean of the Royal Canadian Academy of Arts, serving an important role in promoting the international communication and dissemination of Canadian art. As a widely accredited scholar of art history and museum director, Dr. Alan McNairn’s research scope covered art in the eighteenth century as well as Canadian art history. His book Behold the Hero: General Wolfe and the Arts in the Eighteenth Century is held as a significant research work in these fields. He is also included in Marquis Who’s Who due to his significant contributions in academic and museum work. 

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