Top 34 Quotes & Sayings by Cai Guo-Qiang

Explore popular quotes and sayings by a Chinese artist Cai Guo-Qiang.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Cai Guo-Qiang

Cai Guo-Qiang is a Chinese artist who currently lives and works in New York City and New Jersey.

I'm always oscillating between if I should sprinkle more gunpowder or less. But if I put too much gunpowder, there may be holes throughout the silk. If not enough, the power and energy would not be shown.
I do believe every artwork has its own charisma. Sometimes it's different from what I expect. When a work is finished, it exudes its own charisma and lives its life independently.
I was growing up in a society that exerted a lot of control on people, and from both my personality and the social condition, I found gunpowder gradually as a very suitable medium for exploration.
Even though Chinese society was really closed, there were two windows for me to explore the world. One was from my mother and grandmother, the unseen and invisible world. Another window was brought from my father's side, those classic and Western books.
I have always been a coward as a child. I am not very brave. I am very aware of the fact that I am not very gutsy. — © Cai Guo-Qiang
I have always been a coward as a child. I am not very brave. I am very aware of the fact that I am not very gutsy.
When I was young, I didn't want to do traditional painting and calligraphy. I deliberately wanted to separate from my father so I could feel I existed myself.
Only individual creativity can bring about real social development.
Only an idiot would open an exhibition saying, 'Look at my awesome work.'
Art should not be a tool of politics, but sometimes art can help make the political climate more open and help society become more free.
For my art, there is a common theme most of the time: it is using the things we can see to search for the world we cannot see.
Anyone can be seduced by the possession of power and influence.
I lived in Japan for eight years before moving to New York, but I was looking forward to a place like America to change my opinion on things and force me to come up with new perspectives.
My father was also a painter - actually, a traditional Chinese painter. His personality is pretty timid and cautious. Like him, I was growing up as a cautious kid.
For an artist, a good place to be is you have some kind of influence and power to get things done, but in your essence you remain a nomad or a soldier facing a difficulty to be overcome.
Through art, through people working together and building relationships and trust, people can overcome the problems of politics.
In my own art, I try to use my personal voice and effort to enable some Chinese people to see the possibilities of another kind of China. A more open China.
In any country, in any city, there will be political influence on what is said, what kind of images are to be projected and, yes, of course artists can be and are influenced by politicians.
I have always found that if, while creating an artwork, the artist constantly feels that some accident would occur if he is not careful, then it is a very significant moment and a significant work.
Any work that is born out of natural serendipity or reverts to simpler times is poignant for people - in any era.
One reason I chose gunpowder is that I had the good luck in my environment to be exposed to gunpowder. The other reason is I was always looking for a visual language that goes beyond the boundary of nations, and so I found gunpowder.
In Quanzhou, I have a lot of influence from superstition. I would go to the temple with my grandmother and mother. That is why I have a lot of curiosity about the unseen force and invisible things.
Using gunpowder as a medium became a way to liberate myself.
Temporality and the transformation of energy are two very important aspects in my work.
The role of art in society is not to resolve conflicts; rather, it is to express these conflicts and antagonisms.
I tend to be cautious and rational, prone to keep everything under control.
The boyhood dream of becoming a painter stays important to me.
Everyone has their moments of solitude, difficulties, and vulnerability. — © Cai Guo-Qiang
Everyone has their moments of solitude, difficulties, and vulnerability.
Computer animation is one way to liberate people from their circumstantial gravity, and it is one way to give them mental freedom.
Even though China was a very closed country, they thought of themselves as the center of the world. It is an ethnic characteristic. After I went to Japan, I had a totally different view. The Japanese are always talking about what the Western world is doing. There is the anxious feeling of an outsider.
My work is like a dialogue between me and unseen powers, like alchemy.
Many artists, when they are creating art, are searching for a vehicle that can manifest a feeling they have inside of themselves.
When I was young, the constraints of Chinese society and my personal timid and cautious nature both drove me to seek a means to go against control. Gunpowder has an inherent uncertainty and uncontrollability and is an important means for me to relieve myself of constraint.
Be Careful Of Books. Be Careful With Books. Be Careful Or One Can Become A Weapon-Wielder. Be Careful Or One Can Become The Victim.
For me it's really important that the work here displays an aesthetic of decay along with the sunken boat with the broken ceramic pieces. They form a unity in showing the power of destruction, the beauty of destruction, whether it's from nature - because the boat has sunk - or through other forces. It's really the beauty of decay and death that holds a power here.
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