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Icarus and Nine Suns by Sun Liang

The artist explains:

"This is a painting created by anger and despair after the 1989 special event (Tiananmen Square). The theme was chosen from Greek mythology: Icarus and his father, Daedalus attempted to escape from prison with wings made of wax. But Icarus flew too close to the sun, which melted his wings. He fell into the sea and died. The Chinese mythology is a story of Houyi shooting ten suns. In the ancient time, there were ten suns in the sky, beasts on the ground, and the people cannot live with it. And then there was a hero called Houyi. He shot nine suns with arrows and killed the beast, so that people can live afterwards. I was in the mood of despair. By concealing two irrelevant myths, it implies the sun can burn those who yearn for freedom to death, while people can shoot the sun as well. This piece like many other works at that time is not allowed to be exhibited in the country (China) for a long time. "

Interview with James Hyman, December 2007.

Sun Liang

Icarus and Nine Suns

Oil on canvas

180 x 120 cms (70.74 x 47.16 ins)

1989

Exhibited:
Genesis of Image: Sun Liang's Oil Paintings, Shanghai Art Museum, Shanghai, China, 2006.
Sun Liang, A Painters Journey, James Hyman Gallery, London, 8 October - 15 November 2008.

Literature:
Sun Liang: A Painter's Journey, James Hyman Gallery, London, 2008, (cat. 1), illustrated p.11 and p.44.