Menu
The New Contemporary Art Magazine

Mu Boyan’s Sculptures Examine Views of Obesity

Obesity was once synonymous with wealth in China. That idea has evolved into a more Western equation of excessive weight gain to the unhealthy and the undesirable. Sculptor/painter Mu Boyan places a different lens on this with his series of obese figures in varying situations. His so-called “Fatty” series appears to comment on this complicated standard. At once vulnerable and exhibitionist, full of absurdity and full of humanity, these sculptures place characters in several unlikely situations, mostly in the nude.

Obesity was once synonymous with wealth in China. That idea has evolved into a more Western equation of excessive weight gain to the unhealthy and the undesirable. Sculptor/painter Mu Boyan places a different lens on this with his series of obese figures in varying situations. His so-called “Fatty” series appears to comment on this complicated standard. At once vulnerable and exhibitionist, full of absurdity and full of humanity, these sculptures place characters in several unlikely situations, mostly in the nude.

Some of the characters hang desperately off of ledges and other objects. Others appear to be confined in smaller spaces or in one case, a bed. All exhibit a realism and vulnerability that evoke several emotions from the viewer.

Boyan is based in Beijing, China. The artist has degrees in sculpture from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in China. The artist’s work has been shown across the world, from Italy and Russia to Switzerland, the U.S., and his native China. Boyan’s work was part of Korea’s Busan Bienalle in 2014 and seveal national exhibitions in China.

Meta
Share
Facebook
Reddit
Pinterest
Email
Related Articles
Kadriye İnal’s “patchwork” paper sculptures capture humanity in both form and the imperfect, abstract beauty found in our seams. The artist's work has also been called collage, though she has said that it exists "somewhere between three and two dimensions, between reality and fiction."
Painter Edward del Rosario's theatrical, yet controlled tableaus carry cross-cultural references. Often in the artist’s work, each of the characters seem to have their own narrative or motivation, creating a piece teeming with both humor and surprising complexity, once absorbed.
Oakland, California based artist Crystal Morey feels a special connection to nature that stems from her childhood years spent in the Sierra Nevada foothills. When she moved to the city, her entire perspective changed. "I once saw humans as being under the umbrella of “nature,” subservient to natural happening. I now realize humans are the largest variable in the changing of our planet’s ecological and environmental outcome," she says. This is the driving motivation behind her sculptures of totem-like creatures inspired by various cultures; human characters wrapped in the skins of eagles, bears, deer, rabbits and other animals.
AFA Gallery is pleased to announce that AFA has become the exclusive representative for Colin Christian’s popular Lipsex sculptures. Colin Christian has created a collection of never-before-seen unique large scale sculptures for AFA.

Subscribe to the Hi-Fructose Mailing List