Ye Linghan

  • About
  • Exhibitions
    • Group Exhibition
    • How Art Museum
  • Artworks
    • Video
  • Articles
  • Ye Linghan
  • Birthdate: 1985
    Birthplace: China | Zhejiang
    Gender: Male
    Lives and Works in: China | Beijing
    About:
    Ye Linghan, born 1985, Lishui, China, studied mural painting and drawing at the China Academy of Art, Hangzhou and lives and works in Beijing. He has exhibited in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Beijing and Taipei. His work has been exhibited at prestigious museums such as the Minsheng Art Museum, MOCA Shanghai and the Today Art Museum Beijing and has been included in notable group exhibitions around the world.
    After studying traditional mural painting and drawing, Ye Linghan gravitated and animation work, though his academic training is evident in his highly detailed drawings and animations, as in Last Experimental Flying Object, which drew him wide attention. He claims, "Direct inspiration comes from individual experience (...)and personal acts. Indirect inspiration comes from signals and information others transmit to me including discussions (...) When I begin a piece of work, I will decide on an overall direction, but I won't limit myself to too many specific details." The temporal nature of video compels him and the graphics, craft, material, structure, rhythm, and aesthetic of it take form in its very making. His animations don't have a strong sense of narrative: the highs and undulating changes inherent in storytelling are absent. Ye's videos incorporate his drawings, paintings and digital animations, resulting in surreal, three-dimensional loops that focus on both the reduction and the building up of various forms. 
  • Exhibitions
    • Cultural Valley of Ou River, A Group Show
      Nov 11, 2025 - May 30, 2026
      Opening: Nov 11, 2025 Tuesday
      Curator: Kaimei Wang
      Artists: Wei Chen, Zhou Chen, Zhixuan Feng, Bailin Fu, Qizhen · Tin Gao, Shan Gao, Han Jin, Yangping Jin, Lin Ke, Jianfeng Ma, Shuang Sha, Yitian Sun, Yiyao Tang, Zhibo Wang, Molin Xie, Xuanxuan Xie, Qingmei Yao, Kaiyang Xiang, Yixin Shang, Ye Linghan, Yong You, Tian Zhu, Michael Ho
      • Group Exhibition, How Art Museum
      • Ongoing
    • Life After Life
      Sep 28, 2024 - Feb 16, 2025
      Opening: Sep 28, 2024 Saturday
      Curators: Zhen Yu, Kaimei Wang
      Artists: Baoyang Chen, Rui huang, Di Liu, Jiayu Liu, Lek Lawrence, Kun Song, Rong Shi, Somei, Ziyang Wu, Zhipeng Wang, Ye Linghan, Tian Yu, Zhen Yu, Wenchao Zhang, ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE AND ART CREATION RESEARCH CENTER, CAA AI Center, UFO media lab, zzyw, Draftman
      • Group Exhibition, How Art Museum
    • You as Me, Hold the Gaze
      Feb 17, 2023 - Oct 12, 2023
      Curator: Xu Tianyi
      Artists: Markus Lüpertz, aaajiao, LLND, Oreet Ashery, Darren Almond, Hu Yun, Carsten Nicolai, Li Binyuan, Lee Yongbaek, Lin Ke, Lin Tianmiao, Liu Wei, Shi Yong, Lu Lei, Tong Wenmin, Tobias Rehberger, Yang Jiecang, Ye Linghan, Yu Ji, Zhang Peili, Zhou Xiaohu, Li Liao, Lee Bul
      • Group Exhibition, How Art Museum
  • Artworks
  • Articles
    • You as Me, Hold the Gaze

      My age, my beast, who will ever

      Look into your eyes.

      And with his own blood glue together

      The backbones of two centuries?

      Osip Mandelstam (1891-1938) wrote down the poem The Age (1923) at the beginning of the 20th century. While expressing his visions and hopes for the age, it also shed light on the conflicts between "poet and his time". In another poem he wrote later, it read: "No, I am no one's contemporary". (1924)

      The Age as quoted in Giorgio Agamben's What Is the Contemporary? and Alain Badiou's The Century . In What Is the Contemporary?, Agamben explained "The contemporary is he who firmly holds his gaze on his own time so as to perceive not its light, but rather its darkness. All eras, for those who experience contemporariness, are obscure." Badiou, when quoting the poem at the end of the 20th century, pointed out that Mandelstam's "beast" as a newborn and fragile presence was doomed to be transient. What Badiou was trying to break was exactly this "backbone". 

      It is widely acknowledged that the 20th century was a century of division. And to gain insights into such "division" takes not only knowledge of what happened in this century, but also of what the people of this century were thinking. If we merely label things that happened without probing into what the people of the century were thinking, we can neither get to truly know the present nor prevent things from repeating themselves. In this same logic, this century would have nothing to with the "future" since its very beginning. 

      You and I as people of some experience of the contemporary are the minimum unit to constitute the complex and multi-layered veins of time of contemporaneity. Hence we shall not follow linear time to describe the nature of things. The exhibition on view, as celebration of the fifth anniversary of the HOW Art Museum (Shanghai), features over 30 pieces of installations and videos by more than 20 artists both at home and from abroad including Lee Bul, Liu Wei, Zhang Peili, Lin Tianmiao, Markus Lüpertz and Carsten Nicolai. Different from the usual curatorial approach that follows a linear timeline to present the works within museum collection, the exhibition follows the principle of "contemporary is he who firmly holds his gaze on his own time". Under the title "You as Me", "you" and "I" are the core of the dialogue with the space, to fill up the absence of subject and scene, reflect upon the tragedies of the century, build connections between contemporary events and past reference, define time from a sociological perspective, treat the "contemporary" as a dividing point between the past and the future, disrupt and reverse language on the cultural level through social installation, rethink of the cultural representations beyond the physical body to confront the fragmented digital world, and morph into an organic life form that cannot be written off in this digital world. 

      However, the attempt to construct non-linear histories through creative reassemblages of time is in itself trapped in the modern view of history. The underlying narratives among different works are merely judgements based on information fed to us from the outside. You and I need to firmly hold our gaze so as to perceive not its light, but rather its darkness.

    [Synopsis] You as Me, Hold the Gaze

    By Xu Tianyi 2023-06-13

    My age, my beast, who will ever

    Look into your eyes.

    And with his own blood glue together

    The backbones of two centuries?

    Osip Mandelstam (1891-1938) wrote down the poem The Age (1923) at the beginning of the 20th century. While expressing his visions and hopes for the age, it also shed light on the conflicts between "poet and his time". In another poem he wrote later, it read: "No, I am no one's contemporary". (1924)

    The Age as quoted in Giorgio Agamben's What Is the Contemporary? and Alain Badiou's The Century . In What Is the Contemporary?, Agamben explained "The contemporary is he who firmly holds his gaze on his own time so as to perceive not its light, but rather its darkness. All eras, for those who experience contemporariness, are obscure." Badiou, when quoting the poem at the end of the 20th century, pointed out that Mandelstam's "beast" as a newborn and fragile presence was doomed to be transient. What Badiou was trying to break was exactly this "backbone". 

    It is widely acknowledged that the 20th century was a century of division. And to gain insights into such "division" takes not only knowledge of what happened in this century, but also of what the people of this century were thinking. If we merely label things that happened without probing into what the people of the century were thinking, we can neither get to truly know the present nor prevent things from repeating themselves. In this same logic, this century would have nothing to with the "future" since its very beginning. 

    You and I as people of some experience of the contemporary are the minimum unit to constitute the complex and multi-layered veins of time of contemporaneity. Hence we shall not follow linear time to describe the nature of things. The exhibition on view, as celebration of the fifth anniversary of the HOW Art Museum (Shanghai), features over 30 pieces of installations and videos by more than 20 artists both at home and from abroad including Lee Bul, Liu Wei, Zhang Peili, Lin Tianmiao, Markus Lüpertz and Carsten Nicolai. Different from the usual curatorial approach that follows a linear timeline to present the works within museum collection, the exhibition follows the principle of "contemporary is he who firmly holds his gaze on his own time". Under the title "You as Me", "you" and "I" are the core of the dialogue with the space, to fill up the absence of subject and scene, reflect upon the tragedies of the century, build connections between contemporary events and past reference, define time from a sociological perspective, treat the "contemporary" as a dividing point between the past and the future, disrupt and reverse language on the cultural level through social installation, rethink of the cultural representations beyond the physical body to confront the fragmented digital world, and morph into an organic life form that cannot be written off in this digital world. 

    However, the attempt to construct non-linear histories through creative reassemblages of time is in itself trapped in the modern view of history. The underlying narratives among different works are merely judgements based on information fed to us from the outside. You and I need to firmly hold our gaze so as to perceive not its light, but rather its darkness.

    Related Artists aaajiao , LLND , Oreet Ashery , Darren Almond , Hu Yun , Lee Bul , Li Liao , Carsten Nicolai , Lee Yongbaek , Li Binyuan , Lin Ke , Lin Tianmiao , Liu Wei , Shi Yong , Markus Lüpertz , Lu Lei , Tong Wenmin , Tobias Rehberger , Yang Jiecang , Zhang Peili , Yu Ji , Ye Linghan , Zhou Wendou , Zhou Xiaohu ,









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