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      The Yan Club Arts Center is exhibiting
        pop artist Yin Kun, who was born in 1962 in Sichuan
        Province. His distorted, surrealistic images---usually children and infants
        with outsized heads in high fashion or politics--are straightforward
        and strangely beautiful. Yin Kun has exhibited this year for the first
        time in Holland.  
        
       Also exhibiting is Han Xuejun, a native
        of Beijing (born in 1968). After graduating from the Tianjin Academy
        of Fine Arts with a degree in oil painting, he traveled through the Qinghai-Tibet
        Highlands and was inspired by the scenery, local customs and simple way
        of life. He invites us to discover the “spiritual charm” of
        vivid regional differences.  
        
      Xiao Se was born in 1970 in Beijing.
        He graduated from the Beijing Arts and Design School with a degree in
        Environmental Art. In 1990 he worked as an art designer at the Beijing
        Music Hall and furthered his studies at the Design Department of the
        Central Academy of Arts and Design in Beijing. He has been singled out
        as one of the emerging oil artists by the well-known Chinese art magazine, Fine
        Arts Research. 
         
        Red Gate
          Gallery  exhibits western artists alongside Chinese contemporaries. Tan
          Ping, born in Chengde in 1960, is known for printmaking. After
          graduating in 1984 from the Printmaking Department of Central Academy
          of Fine Arts in Beijing, Tan Ping won the West German Cultural Exchange
          Scholarship (DAAD) and completed a Master of Arts in the Free Art Department
          of Berlin Art University. Tan Ping has exhibited extensively in both
          Germany and China. 
         
       Lionel Bawden was born
        in 1974 in Auburn, New South Wales. He took a BA in visual arts and painting
        at the ANU Institute of the Arts, Canberra School of Art. From 1995-1996
        he was a six month exchange student at the Oil Painting Workshop at China
        National Academy of Fine Arts in Hangzhou province. He lives and works
        in Sidney, Australia and exhibits extensively throughout the Pacific
        Rim.  
        
      Robin Best was born in Perth, Western
        Australia in 1953. She obtained a Graduate Diploma Visual Arts, University
        of South Australia and before that a Diploma in Design/Ceramics from
        South Australian School of Art. Her recent work researches the origins
        and migration of the arabesque patterns through Asia and Europe. Her
        work may be found in the National Gallery of Scotland, Seto Cultural
        Centre, Japan, Art Gallery of South Australia, and Art Gallery of Tasmania,
        among others.  
        
       Ri Williamson is a New Zealand artist
        who looks at “the current epidemic of package or ready-made housing
        and rolling subdivision.” After graduating from the University
        of Canterbury School of Fine Arts in Sculpture, Ri Williamson exhibited
        installations around New Zealand, São Paulo and Hong Kong before winning
        a three month residency at Red Gate Gallery. As Beijing is the world’s
        largest construction site with the 2008 Olympics push, Ri Williamson
        should have more than a little local inspiration.  
        
      Wang Qiang is a conceptual
        artist born in Hangzhou in 1957. His theme is the deliberate and often
        ironic mixing of East-West, something we have seen from Chinese artists
        since the Eighties blossoming of the Beijing Art scene. 
       The art in Beijing is often startling and
        sometimes very tender. The new tendency toward inclusion of Western artists
        in Beijing will add vibrancy and dialogue which is positive and exciting. 
       Yan Club Arts Center  
      www.yanclub.com 
       Red Gate Gallery  
       www.redgategallery.com  
      
       
           
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