Luc Tuymans: The Past

Installation view, Luc Tuymans: The Past, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China, 2024. Courtesy UCCA Center for Contemporary Art

Installation view, Luc Tuymans: The Past, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China, 2024. Courtesy UCCA Center for Contemporary Art

Installation view, Luc Tuymans: The Past, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China, 2024. Courtesy UCCA Center for Contemporary Art

Installation view, Luc Tuymans: The Past, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China, 2024. Courtesy UCCA Center for Contemporary Art

 

UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China

November 16, 2024–February 16, 2025

One of the most important painters working today, Luc Tuymans explores the unsteady power that images wield to shape the present and give form to the past. Organized by Peter Eleey, UCCA curator-at-large, in close collaboration with the artist, Luc Tuymans: The Past will be one of the most significant surveys of his work and its first comprehensive presentation in China–a country in which he has a longstanding interest, and where he has previously organized and presented exhibitions. The seductive, expressive surfaces of his paintings belie a restrained silence that invites multiple readings. Based on preexisting imagery, Tuymans’s works may imbue ordinary objects with outsized importance, or hauntingly reduce subjects of enormous consequence to pictorial ciphers that evade the illustrative clarity often associated with history painting. Embracing both the force and limitations of the painterly image and craft, Tuymans has become deeply influential to his peers as well as subsequent generations of artists, including many in China who discovered his work in the 1990s. Installed in the UCCA’s Great Hall and Featuring approximately 80 works drawn from the full scope of the artist’s career—including Chinese subjects that have featured in his work since his very first exhibition in 1985—the exhibition highlights Tuymans’s constant awareness of the role of his medium in modeling history and influencing memory.

Learn more at UCCA Center for Contemporary Art.