Bing is mostly known for his work with language; inventing his own Chinese symbols, casting type faces, creating scrolls in reference to his heritage. His foray into large scale sculpture is a thing that was so arresting that I stood silent in it's presence trying to figure out a way to articulate the work to others, the piece communicating more through form than any blog post ever really could. Walking into the space that houses The Phoenix sculptures you are first confronted with crates, large packing boxes stamped with Chinese symbols that, presumably, were used to ship the giant birds across the globe. This seemingly simple detail of displaying the shipping method adds both an element of reveal, snaking you around into the exhibition space (like a good Serra), but also a nod to origin, manufacturing, communication, language and industry: these crates contain worlds and these worlds are so foreign yet hold the defining objects of so many other worlds within.

Many contemporary Chinese artists deal with issues of reconciling a specific cultural past with the new culture of industry. Ai Weiwei and Stephanie Syjuco are two prime examples. And the recent, under-the-radar documentary Chimeras also deals with this issue by following a young, emerging Chinese photographer and a famous contemporary artist as they try to balance the changing cultures and expectations of their home, quietly displaying the clash of making relevant work in the face of tradition and the role that an "art star" system has in this particular politically motivated society- is it a mimic of the East? A new definition of what it means to be Chinese? Are the economic rise and the social structure compatible? The scope and scale of Bing's rendering of these questions will leave a permanent mark on his culture- especially since he was recently named Vice President of the Central Academy of Arts in Beijing, a feat that seems so unlikely in the wake of other recent treatment of thought provoking artists from the region. At first I thought the Phoenixes were a huge departure from Bing's language centered work, moving to an image in order to communicate with our image savvy digital society, but now I realize that they are an obvious extension. Each tiny fragment that composes these sculptures holds a meaning and history just as weighted as the entire image itself, the words of industrialization, the people behind the building, making up the sentences and identity of a highly spiritual cultural symbol...unlike the legendary Phoenix, and unlike the East's phantom vision of China, Bing's Phoenix is a solid representation of a culture that will always seem to remain intangible to others, at odds with itself, and always able to be reborn. More photos here.