Celebrity Life
The Artrepreneur, Michael Xufu Huang
Not many 25-year-olds can open a museum and anticipate artâs global cognoscenti of dealers, collectors, gallerists, owners, digital platforms and venerable institutions to be watching every step of the way with breathless anticipation. So it is with one of Chinaâs millennial calling-cards, the dynamic artrepreneur of style and the aesthetic, Michael Xufu Huang, and founder of Beijingâs X Museum, which opens next month.
Huang exhibits soft power on a prolific scale, and his creative ambition encapsulates both the countryâs newly wealthy seeking a richer cultural life and those legions of newly influential digital hipsters whose minds are both more open and more international than their forebears, and more concerned with high class and good taste than just riches. Huang is digital marketingâs content It-boy nonpareil and heâs riding the now-and-future wave array of electronic excitation that World 2.0 has become. And a Great Wave it is.
Despite his being a mere spring chicken of a lad â and a mighty stylish one at that â this isnât the first time Huangâs initiated such a venture. In 2014, he co-founded whatâs become the much-lauded M Woods non-profit private museum in Beijingâs 798 art district with Wanwan Lei (former model for revered Chinese painter Liu Ye) and her husband Lin Han (a prolific collector) â the coupleâs fame and network lends them glowing digital celebrification.
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The trio wanted to bring experimental and international art into China. Their collective mantra was squarely aimed at luring a younger generation of Chinese into museums so they might adopt art as a hobby and grow a lifestyle with it. And rapidly came the expectant eyes of global artâs jet-set. And yet, five years on, despite artâs percolation and greater popularisation in China, Huang is choosing to move on at what seems like the pinnacle of success. Why?
âThereâs a few reasons,â he says between changes of costume during our shoot. âFirst, I think Iâm quite disappointed with the Chinese museum scene, in terms of everyone doing Western-themed artists.â Huang doesnât deny that such exhibitions are publicly important for art education and has actively promoted them in the past (Andy Warhol, for example) with M Woods, he just canât reconcile how that leverages 2020 Chinaâs influence in the global art world.
âForm the New Norm,â goes his X Museum mantra, and like millions of his millennial peers and looming Gen-Zers, heâs in a rush to expedite this centuryâs geo-cultural shift via scroll, in the blink of an eye and the
âLikeâ of a social-media post. âI just want to show that weâre not like a typical museum. Yes, weâre starting with a collection, but the whole idea is to cultivate new talent.â Huang explains that currently thereâs no such mechanism in China to help nurture young artists in such a way. Thus, he plans âto help them build their career and gain them more international attentionâ. He pauses. âI think thatâs something I cannot resist â to show people how curious we are and why itâs important that weâre here.â
Huang has been continually travelling, (he was in Bangladesh prior our meeting in Hong Kong and flying to London the following day) and claims never to have much time to read long-form art-world articles. âI never have any time. Iâm a workaholic,â he says. Little wonder given his remit. For X, heâs overseeing programming, development, promotion and more. âItâs like my baby,â he jokes. âI do everything for it.â
X Museum is a two-storey building in the cityâs Chaoyang District orchestrated by Beijing-based Korean architect and designer Howard Jiho Kim, who oversees the studio TEMP. Huangâs opening exhibition How Do We Begin? , which forms the first part in a triennial, consists of 33 artists who espouse the millennial zeitgeist, and is curated by London Royal College of Art graduate Poppy Dongxu Wu (@poppydxwu). âThis is her first exhibition in China,â says Huang, almost matter-of-factly, âand sheâs doing a really good job. Sheâs from an architecture background too which is good for our multidisciplinary viewpoint.â
As counterbalance, Huang has assembled a glittering jury who will award a cash prize, consisting of Hans Ulrich Obrist (Serpentine Galleries, who says that Huangâs âimmense curiosityâ never ceases to amaze him), Kate Fowle (director of MoMA PS1), Zhang Zikang (Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing), and Diana Campbell Betancourt (Samdani Art Foundation). Looking ahead he also foresees digital projects. âIâd like to do curatorial projects online because the physical space can only allow you to do so much â like one or two shows at a time. There are also so many good curators I want to work with in China.â
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While Huang grew up and schooled in London and went to the Tate Modern every weekend to learn more about getting into the profession, his art epiphany came in the less likely art milieu of one of the Tateâs satellites. Holidaying â in fact he says he was camping â with friends in the seaside village of St Ives, southwest England in 2012, Huang discovered the Tate St Ives showing American artist Alex Katzâs seascapes and beach scenes and went to take a look. âWhat got me hooked is when I went to Tate St Ives, and Alex Katz, everything clicked in my heart. This was like a revelation, and you feel itâs a part of your life. It made me extremely happy and meaningful.â
Itâs curious that Huang succumbed to the leisure and recreation of Katzâs work, the Americanâs high-intensity art paintings being defined as they are by an economy of line and indulgence of style, along with their cool but seductive emotional detachment. That could be a description of Huang. Influenced as much by style, fashion and music as by art history, yet still classical at heart despite the ânow-yâ vibe. Katzâs sassy show, appropriately enough, was called Give Me Tomorrow.
Poet, writer and University of Pennsylvania professor Kenneth Goldsmith taught the undergraduate Huang, who sat in on a grad seminar he was teaching in the art department, which Goldsmith describes as a âfree-form discussion group about issues of the dayâ, and Huang also took a class Goldsmith taught about fashion theory and creative writing. The Ivy League professor recalls Huangâs unusual âXâ factor. âHe was perhaps the most unique student Iâve had in the 15 years of teaching,â he recalls. âHe would saunter into class wearing furs and designer sunglasses, hanging on every word I said, taking in every bit of information about art, literature and music I had to offer. He was very quiet but very engaged. He cast a spell on myself and all of the other students, who at first were a bit perplexed but in time came around to adore him.â
How does the X man see himself? âA paradox,â he says, managing to reference an âXâ. Personality-wise, Iâm quite aloof in some ways. I like to have a lot of âme timeâ when I can. I donât like to socialise or be too public. But nowadays if you want to do anything you have to be present, so itâs like a paradox. You want to be real, but thereâs that sense that your platform or social media is just curated or performed. Itâs not the real you. And then you have to say whatâs politically correct; thereâs what you believe in, or what you have to believe in.â
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In retrospect, Huang, despite his âcool for Katzâ epiphany in St Ives, England, thought the London galleries too inaccessible and âtoo poshâ in their ways at the time he was growing up. âLondon galleries are more distant if youâre young. Itâs easier to access art spaces in New York, and that brought me into the community, and I became more involved. It created a sense of belonging and that definitely helped.â
Goldsmith recalls a conversation he had about what Huang might do after graduating. âI do remember one time talking to him when he was considering going into tech after school. I told him that although heâd undoubtedly make a lot of money, the art world would be a lesser place should he not pursue it. Weâre all glad to he took my advice!â
Despite the classicism, Huang, like many whoâve grown up in his generation, follows whatâs called âPost-Internetâ Art. âIâm very interested in Post-Internet Art. And I want such artists to come to China â thereâs such a lot of material people can use in China, and post-internet art in a China context.â How does he define such Post-Internet Art? âItâs art dealing with tech, digital, industrial materials; for our generation itâs something we grew up with.â
How does he assess the legacy of contemporary Chinese artist Cao Fei, whose first major solo exhibition Blueprints is showing at Londonâs Serpentine Galleries until May 17. âFor me, sheâs not really my generation, but she has set a tone for Chinese art. Sheâs probably the first who represented China globally and challenged everyoneâs perception. I think the new generation in China are now very international.â
Which in Huangâs generation means a huge number of people that have studied abroad and have a global vision. And even those who didnât. âEveryone is pretty educated now, the education system is good, English is very good, everyone is curious. Like film, and music, or even #Metoo,
people see that and its global effect. And with that, Chinese institutions can have influence globally now.â
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So far Huangâs X Museum is generating all the right noises. âI think weâre already generating a lot of fuss, and on digital and social media, people are excited about it, people are talking. Itâs also word of mouth; we bring out the community of real talent and of course they have their own communities. I think itâs just a matter of time. We also have fashion people, brands I want to collaborate with, and sponsors.â
âYou know our slogan is âform the new normâ, and I think weâre doing that and I always see the art world as a challenge, I donât follow all the institutions, I do what I think I should do, and what I think is correct. You must believe what you believe in and there are so many paradoxes along the way. We want a new generation of art lovers and supporters and people who influence society. So Iâm very grateful they are on this journey with me, and to have this power in China. After all, why do expensive shows that donât give us any benefit. I donât believe in that.â
What will be his own definition of success? âWhen I can retire without worry,â he says. âWhen the programme and the institutions are good enough and the team is running itself. Thatâs my dream of success.â And then he gets objective about his situation. âBut, if thereâs another young person, then I too would question how legit they are, how serious, as anything new takes time to get used to. At least people are used to me already and arenât surprised when I call up with something like this. And the result has been phenomenalâ
I ask if thereâs anything he hasnât shared heâd like to convey before he saunters off to ride and drive the wave of his ambition. âItâs mainly about taking our power back and the new generation doing something interesting with our own content. I think thatâs the key.â
And President Xi? âWe would really like him to come, and I hope that when we do well he would want to come.â From X to X, the geo-cultural future starts here.
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Photography Ricky LoÂ
Art Direction Sepfry NgÂ
Styling Zaneta ChengÂ
Hair and Makeup Kidd SunÂ
Photography Assistants Jason Li and Kelvin Sim
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