Wang Ziling

Works
  • Wang Ziling, Mask, 2024
    Wang Ziling
    Mask, 2024
    Suspended Hardened Paint
    100 x 80 x 25 cm
    39 3/8 x 31 1/2 x 9 7/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, All of Nature Grows, 2023
    Wang Ziling
    All of Nature Grows, 2023
    Suspended Hardened Paint
    83 x 60 x 14 cm
    32 5/8 x 23 5/8 x 5 1/2 in
  • Wang Ziling, Tangled, 2024
    Wang Ziling
    Tangled, 2024
    Hardened Paint Without Backing
    80 x 110 x 8 cm
    31 1/2 x 43 1/4 x 3 1/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, Reversed, 2023
    Wang Ziling
    Reversed, 2023
    Hardened Paint Without Backing
    110 x 58 x 5.5 cm
    43 1/4 x 22 7/8 x 2 1/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, Untitled, 2023
    Wang Ziling
    Untitled, 2023
    Hardened Paint Without Backing
    55 x 55 x 5 cm /piece
    21 5/8 x 21 5/8 x 2 in /piece
  • Wang Ziling, 2022
    Wang Ziling
    Hardened acrylic and polymer
    110 x 80 cm
  • Wang Ziling, With Songs Configuration, 2022
    Wang Ziling
    With Songs Configuration, 2022
    Hardened Paint Without Backing
    60 x 40 cm x 2 / piece
    23 5/8 x 15 3/4 in x 2 / piece
  • Wang Ziling, Close to Incompatible , 2020
    Wang Ziling
    Close to Incompatible , 2020
    Hardened Acrylic and Polymer
    110 x 110 x 4.6 cm
    43 1/4 x 43 1/4 x 1 3/4 in
  • Wang Ziling, Half of the blossoms, 2020
    Wang Ziling
    Half of the blossoms, 2020
    Hardened acrylic and polymer
    110 x 78 x 4.5 cm
  • Wang Ziling, Rebirth, 2021
    Wang Ziling
    Rebirth, 2021
    Hardened Acrylic and Polymer
    110 x 110 x 4.6 cm
    43 1/4 x 43 1/4 x 1 3/4 in
  • Wang Ziling, Whispers of Nobody, 2020
    Wang Ziling
    Whispers of Nobody, 2020
    Acrylic and bio-polymer
    110 x 110 x 4.6 cm
    43 1/4 x 43 1/4 x 1 3/4 in
  • Wang Ziling, Glimpses of Lights, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    Glimpses of Lights, 2019
    Acrylic on wood
    110 x 110 cm

    43.3 x 43.3 inch
  • Wang Ziling, An ordinary alternation between sun and moon, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    An ordinary alternation between sun and moon, 2019
    Acrylic on wood
    100 x 50 x 4 cm
    39 3/8 x 19 3/4 x 1 5/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, Lost in fleeting distance, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    Lost in fleeting distance, 2019
    acrylic on wood panel
    110 x 50 x 4 cm
    43 1/4 x 19 3/4 x 1 5/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, The origins of never, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    The origins of never, 2019
    Acrylic on wood panel
    114 x 40 x 4.5 cm
    44 7/8 x 15 3/4 x 1 3/4 in
  • Wang Ziling, Traces of remembered lands, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    Traces of remembered lands, 2019
    acrylic on wood panel,
    100 x 50 x 4 cm
    39 3/8 x 19 3/4 x 1 5/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, Further Than Ever, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    Further Than Ever, 2019
    Acrylic on Wood Panel
    43 x 97 x 3.5 cm
    16 7/8 x 38 1/4 x 1 3/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, Only Distance, 2019
    Wang Ziling
    Only Distance, 2019
    Acrylic on wood panel
    117 x 62 x 4 cm
    46 1/8 x 24 3/8 x 1 5/8 in
  • Wang Ziling, Found In Between , 2018
    Wang Ziling
    Found In Between , 2018
    Acrylic on Canvas
    60 x 120 cm
    23 5/8 x 47 1/4 in
  • Wang Ziling, Between the Lands , 2018
    Wang Ziling
    Between the Lands , 2018
    Acrylic on wood
    90 x 70 x 90 cm
  • Wang Ziling, Dream Of The Creator , 2018
    Wang Ziling
    Dream Of The Creator , 2018
    Acrylic on wood
    75 x 150 x 4 cm
  • Wang Ziling, Half the frame , 2017
    Wang Ziling
    Half the frame , 2017
    Acrylic on wood
    45 x 90 x 3 cm
  • Wang Ziling, Peak of the peak , 2018
    Wang Ziling
    Peak of the peak , 2018
    Acrylic on wood
    150 x 50 x 10 cm
Biography
Wang Ziling (b.1988  in Hunan, China) creates astonishing sculptural paintings in which she explores our perception of external surroundings by reforming the structure of how we see and perceive.
While delving into the relationship between colours and their abstract manifestations, Wang Ziling’s works attempt to break with convention. Her artistic practice explores a new sense of freedom and generates unrestrained abstract forms that cannot be confined to the limits of traditional frames. The colours in her works are boldly flying outside the boundaries of conventional paintings, providing the viewer with a three-dimensional visual challenge.
 
Inspired by artists such as Olafur Eliasson, whose practice creates an enhanced experience of the environment by questioning our social way of thinking and seeing, Wang Ziling generates connections between structures and images to encourage and challenge our perception of imagery.
 
Wang Ziling’s practice also incorporates influences from Gerhard Richter and Ian Davenport. It simultaneously adopts and contemporise the cavalier perspective of ancient Chinese visual representation of space and time. In doing so, the connections in her paintings link her exploration of our current cultural and visual experience and customs with ancient visual perspectives, whilst simultaneously connecting with the subject and thing in itself.
 
In using this approach, Wang Ziling encourages the viewer to travel from one image to another, from one time to another, and from one space to another. This process of seeing interacts with different spatial viewing logics and expectations. The connected images are fragments of what we experience both through time and our understanding of the external environment.
Born in 1988 in Hunan, China, Wang Ziling lives and works in London.
 
She graduated with an MA in Fine Art from Central Saint Martins College of Art & Design, London, and a BA in painting at the Academy of Art & Design from Tsinghua University in Beijing.
Wang Ziling has been involved in projects with museums and art organisations. Her work has been collected by the Today Art Museum in Beijing, China, and the Copelouzos Family Art Museum, Athens, Greece. She was an artist in residence at the Centre for Contemporary Chinese Art in Manchester, UK, in 2018.
 
Her work has won or been shortlisted in several art prizes, including Sunny Art Prize (2018), Beep Painting Prize (2018), Sunday Times Watercolour Competition (2017), Solo Award (2016), the Lacey Contemporary Art Prize (2016). She has won the Premium Art Special Award from the Society Of Women Artist Exhibition (2016), awarded by Her Royal Highness Princess Michael of Kent, and won the International Confederation of Art Critics Art Contest 4th Prize (2016). Her work also won the bronze prize at the ‘Giant Cup’ Today National Art Students Awards at Beijing Today Art Museum (2010).

“I relate conceptually to classical Chinese landscape paintings because the cavalier perspective represents a movement of space and time in one image. But in my work I make this visual representation three dimensional and emphasise the dynamics between solid and negative spaces to create new challenges, aiming to offer stimulating perspectives.”