Huang Yong Ping: 'Ling Zhi Helicopters'
Leidschenveen-Ypenburg
Location: Rijswijkse Landingslaan, Leidschenveen-Ypenburg
Official unveiling: 4 October 2020
by Robert van Asten, alderman of The Hague
Facebook album of the unveiling
lingzhihelicopters.nl
On Sunday 4 October 2020 the iconic artwork Ling Zhi Helicopters by the late Chinese-French
artist Huang Yong Ping was unveiled in city district
Leidschenveen-Ypenburg, in the presence of his widow Shen Yuan and his
daughter. >> read more
With this work of art the city of The
Hague realizes an ambitious project and adds an iconic work of art to
its impressive collection of art in public space, which also includes e.g.
the Celestial Vault by James Turrell, Park in the Water by Vito Acconci and The Sculpture Gallery by
P. Struycken. The new monumental work of art is located on the site of
the former Ypenburg airport and marks the creation of the city district
Leidschenveen-Ypenburg.
In 2016 the city of
The Hague commissioned a work of art in public space in order to
celebrate the completion of the newly developed city district
Leidschenveen-Ypenburg. During the selection procedure, the city was
advised by a committee of local inhabitants and art experts, under the
guidance of art center Stroom Den Haag. They chose the design of Huang
Yong Ping, because Ling Zhi Helicopters connects the history of
the location and the creation of the city district in a highly
poetic way. The artist chose the location of the top of the Rijswijkse
Landingslaan (the former landing strip of the local airport) for an
intriguing and gigantic group of three 'mushroom helicopters'. On the
lawn three huge Ling Zhi mushrooms of respectively 5.5 m., 6.8 m. and
6.3 m. high will be erected. When the wind is blowing the 'hats' will
gently turn the rotor blades, making it look as if the work has just
landed there. From 1936 until 1987 this location was the site of airport
Ypenburg. Today it is a lively neighborhood on a historic site that is
still very much alive in the memory of many local residents. The
monumental work of art thus represents the powerful synthesis of
retrospection and progress..
Ling Zhi
Ling Zhi is the name of a small mushroom that grows in China on old trees and in the mountains. In traditional Chinese medicine and according to the Taoist belief, the Ling Zhi mushroom is a medicine to ensure a very long life. Huang Yong Ping decided to enlarge three specimens of this type of mushroom. Unfortunately he himself died prematurely and unexpectedly, but as a legacy he left the city of The Hague a beautiful work of art that depicts a long (and enriched) life.
A unique production process
The monumental scale of Ling Zhi Helicopters called for a completely new production process, combining innovative and artisanal techniques, from 3d scans and foam processing to hammering copper. The artwork was produced and initiated in the Netherlands. The company Anything is Possible in Abcoude is responsible for the production and technical advice. Shortly before his death Huang Yong Ping visited Abcoude and was full of praise for the way his work was produced. In consultation with his widow, Shen Yuan (herself a sculptor), the artwork was completed according to the exact specifications of Huang Yong Ping.
Huang Yong Ping
Huang Yong Ping (1954-2019) was a French-Chinese artist who moved to Europe in the late 1980s. He lived and worked in Paris, where he died unexpectedly in the fall of last year. Ling Zhi Helicopters, which was already nearing completion, is one of his last designs.
Huang Yong Ping is considered one of the foremost artists of the Chinese avant-garde. Internationally acclaimed for his inventiveness and boundless imagination, he succeeded in connecting Eastern and Western art traditions in his work. His monumental installations are impressive not only as works of art, but also because of their astute view of today's world and our place in the history.
Until the mid-1980s he was a member of the Xiamen Dada movement, which organized happenings, modeled after those of Joseph Beuys, Marcel Duchamp and John Cage. In 1989 he was invited to take part in Magiciens de la Terre, the legendary exhibition dedicated to non-western art in the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. After the massacre in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, he decided to stay in France. In 1996 his work was part of the European art event Manifesta in Rotterdam and in 1997 he participated in Skulptur Projekte in Münster. He officially became a French citizen in 1999. In that same year and in 2009 he represented France at the Venice Biennale. His work was part of a.o. the exhibitions Monumenta (Grand Palais, Paris, 2016), and Art and China after 1989: The Theater of the world (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2017), and is included in many leading, international art collections. In the Netherlands his work The overturned tomb (1994) is part of the sculpture park of the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo.
Ling Zhi is the name of a small mushroom that grows in China on old trees and in the mountains. In traditional Chinese medicine and according to the Taoist belief, the Ling Zhi mushroom is a medicine to ensure a very long life. Huang Yong Ping decided to enlarge three specimens of this type of mushroom. Unfortunately he himself died prematurely and unexpectedly, but as a legacy he left the city of The Hague a beautiful work of art that depicts a long (and enriched) life.
A unique production process
The monumental scale of Ling Zhi Helicopters called for a completely new production process, combining innovative and artisanal techniques, from 3d scans and foam processing to hammering copper. The artwork was produced and initiated in the Netherlands. The company Anything is Possible in Abcoude is responsible for the production and technical advice. Shortly before his death Huang Yong Ping visited Abcoude and was full of praise for the way his work was produced. In consultation with his widow, Shen Yuan (herself a sculptor), the artwork was completed according to the exact specifications of Huang Yong Ping.
Huang Yong Ping
Huang Yong Ping (1954-2019) was a French-Chinese artist who moved to Europe in the late 1980s. He lived and worked in Paris, where he died unexpectedly in the fall of last year. Ling Zhi Helicopters, which was already nearing completion, is one of his last designs.
Huang Yong Ping is considered one of the foremost artists of the Chinese avant-garde. Internationally acclaimed for his inventiveness and boundless imagination, he succeeded in connecting Eastern and Western art traditions in his work. His monumental installations are impressive not only as works of art, but also because of their astute view of today's world and our place in the history.
Until the mid-1980s he was a member of the Xiamen Dada movement, which organized happenings, modeled after those of Joseph Beuys, Marcel Duchamp and John Cage. In 1989 he was invited to take part in Magiciens de la Terre, the legendary exhibition dedicated to non-western art in the Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris. After the massacre in Tiananmen Square in Beijing, he decided to stay in France. In 1996 his work was part of the European art event Manifesta in Rotterdam and in 1997 he participated in Skulptur Projekte in Münster. He officially became a French citizen in 1999. In that same year and in 2009 he represented France at the Venice Biennale. His work was part of a.o. the exhibitions Monumenta (Grand Palais, Paris, 2016), and Art and China after 1989: The Theater of the world (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, 2017), and is included in many leading, international art collections. In the Netherlands his work The overturned tomb (1994) is part of the sculpture park of the Kröller-Müller Museum in Otterlo.
Acknowledgements:
The
artwork Ling Zhi Helicopters was created in collaboration with Project
Bureau Ypenburg, the Leidschenveen Development Agency, the municipality
of The Hague and Stroom Den Haag. With special thanks to: Anything is Possible, Shen Yuan and Huang Yan.
- 04 Oct '20