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HypeArt Visits: Ji Zou Paints a Portal Between the Digital and Divine

HypeArt Visits: Ji Zou Paints a Portal Between the Digital and Divine

“The more time I spend with this kind of work, the more conceptual it gets. My relationship with everything I’m using – my hands, the material – it all feels different now.”

There’s a psychoanalytic, bedroom-esque vision that threads through your paintings. Would you say your background informs the themes explored in your work?

A lot of my work plays on internal states. It exists in this surreal realm, and I think it has a lot to do with growing up in the suburbs. There was nothing really going on around me, so I was left to think a lot and just be on the internet. That space is so malleable, so I spent a lot of time imagining what those digital worlds look like, and how I saw myself operating within them.

When did you realize you wanted to move to New York to pursue art?

It came really slowly for me, like 10 years in the making. I always wanted to be an artist, but growing up in Canton, Michigan, I didn’t think it was possible. When I was younger, I had works in some local shows, but they didn’t really sell.

I moved to New York with one of my best friends. I was helping him out on photoshoots, though it didn’t feel super aligned with my creative interests, so I started doing illustration for editorials and companies, which I really liked because I could express a mode of visual art where I felt like myself.

I still didn’t have a lot of narrative control, so I began creating my own digital works. I released them during the pandemic, and I got a lot of really good reception, which was really encouraging. It led me to painting, and my exploration of the physical became a lot deeper once I went to grad school at RISD, where I had adequate studio space.

How would you describe the transition from a digital to physical workflow?

Honestly, it happened kind of abruptly. For a while, I was afraid of making physical work — of paint — and still am because it feels so permanent. Obviously you can paint over something, but it still leaves a textural ghost underneath. There’s a lot less control with this medium, but one day I just decided to do it.

My relationship with the physical has definitely changed a lot. My earlier works are pretty image-focused, whereas in my latest piece, the conversation with the surface of the canvas is a lot more obvious. The more time I spend with this kind of work, the more conceptual it gets. My relationship with everything I’m using – my hands, the material – it all feels different now.

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