Share to Social Media
Log in to your Account
Forgot Password
If you have forgotten your registered email, please contact our Client Services Team for further assistance.
Create an Account
Password Strength: Weak
Password Strength: Fair
Password Strength: Strong
Reset Password
Password Strength: Weak
Password Strength: Fair
Password Strength: Strong
Confirm Your Bid
Sale HK003 | Lot 20
Ding Yi(b.1962)
The total purchase price of the lot for your reference:
(including % Buyer's Premium)
Placing a maximum bid does not mean you will end up paying the full amount of your maximum bid. The system will automatically place consecutive and incremental bids on your behalf up to but not exceeding the amount of your maximum bid in response to other bids placed during the live auction.

When you confirm the bid, it means you are committing to buy this lot if you are the successful bidder and you are irrevocably agree to pay the full purchase price including % buyer's premium. You may nevertheless raise or lower your maximum bid 24 hours prior to the live auction starts. It also means that you have read and agreed to our Terms and Conditions of Purchase and Terms and Conditions for Online Bidding.
CONFIRM BID CANCEL
Lot 20
Ding Yi(b.1962)
Crosses 06-b29
HK$129,800
Ding Yi(b.1962)
Crosses 06-b29
silver pigment on paper,
Chinese fan
executed in 2006
16.5 x 55 cm (6 1/2 x 21 5/8 in)
fan length 30cm (11 3/4 in)

Ding Yi composed his artworks by using repetitive pattern of “cross”. His simple vision theory seems to violate all the other theories. Painting is neither a fantasy nor a figure’s reflection, but it is a direct visual effect by repeating the same pattern “cross.” Ding has developed his own abstract aesthetics, which could be layers perpendicular to cross angles, horizontal and beveled lines in composition and honest to instinct. Instead of creating a new reality, Ding chose to start from the existing means. He conceptually integrates the production and the conditions into his works. The abstract realism of these paintings has become the resolution of the work: the repeating “cross” is being reproduced for 18 years until now, like infinity. In his visual structure, he aims on a rigidly simple system instead of the traditional exaggeration form. His works are therefore regarded as the “popular education for illiterate of art”.

The repetitive yet harmonious “crosses” depicted in his work visually present the complex influences between rigidity and dynamics. Just like Chinese calligraphy, Ding Yi’s symbols signify the relationship and order between human and the universe.
SELECT CURRENCY