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Glows in the Arctic

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“Glows in the Night,” this video art piece, is done by artist Yang Yongliang who adopts the images of urban architectures as brushstroke to depict a digital image creation based on the layers of peaks and mountainous and detailed landscape in
the style of the Song Dynasty (960-1279 AD) paintings.

Traditional Chinese landscape paintings often express the inner landscape through depicting mountains and rivers in the natural world, while Yang Yongliang's works evoke people's reflection on modern urban life and the natural environment. His unique creative approach invites viewers to see the beauty of their surroundings, while also encouraging them to observe the complexities of modern urban life.

In this exhibition, the artist team applied the most advanced AI technology to greatly increase the resolution of the original work by 400%, together with the 85” High Fidelity ART Display of FindARTs developed by AUO Corporation to present
unprecedented effects.

AUO's exclusive A.R.T. Advanced Reflectionless Technology allows Yang Yongliang's video art works to break through the previous hardware limitations, greatly eliminates screen reflections, and presents video works with a painting-like texture on the screen in front of the audience.

Yang Yongliang × AUO

Yang Yongliang is born at the old town of Jiading District, Shanghai in 1980. He studied traditional Chinese painting since childhood. In early 2000s, he graduated from the Shanghai Design Branch of the China Academy of Art, and has been engaged in multimedia art creation since then. Currently Yang works and lives in New York and Shanghai.

Yang's works capture countless urban images, and through digital synthesis, he reconstructs and innovates the development of Chinese landscape. From a distance, those artworks look like a giant album of vivid landscapes, but with a closer view, they seem to be the epitome of the development of modern civilization. His works have been exhibited at home and abroad all year round, and are collected by many major art museums and public institutions around the world, including UCCA Center for Contemporary Art (Beijing), Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, British Museum, Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, and National Gallery of Victoria (Melbourne).