
Xingzi Gu’s work don’t think about earthly gravity, nor do they depict scenes which have ever existed on this planet. All eight compositions in Pure Coronary heart Corridor broadcast memory-mined configurations of lovers and strangers, in addition to folks forgotten, faintly remembered, or fully re-imagined.
Combining on-line imagery and movie stills, Gu layers, airbrushes, and stains acrylic and oil paint into vaporous scenes containing characters each boundless and bonded, undulating out and in of one another. {Couples}, cuddling geese, and scattered butterflies occupy steamy, mystical realms that appear to dissolve into the canvas. In “Orange Bed room” (2023–24), two shoulder-to-shoulder figures inhale cigarettes in victorious unison. Crimsoned from the waist down, with uncovered chests, the characters are distant, paused in thought. But Gu imbues the scene with intimacy by depicting their shared consolation within the nude towards the fiery crimson backdrop. Wispy shades of grey define a veranda and a small fern within the foreground, with what appears like a tall bookshelf positioned behind, combining each inside and exterior options within the portray’s “behind-closed-doors” settings. A light, dingy chandelier emits a moody hue in blotches of lighter yellows and reds, whereas a very shady part eliminates the figures’ flaws just like the dim lighting of a bar.



In “Untitled (Cherry Coke or Ocean Flame)” (2024), we’re voyeurs to a young second between two androgynous figures who drape over one another, head to abdomen, locked in a seductive gaze. Faintly dappled blue bubbles blow throughout their lounging embrace — from which I might by no means need to unravel — suggesting pheromone-infused goosebumps of ecstasy. It’s stated that those that emit a lightweight blue aura are related to qualities resembling serenity, sincerity, and clear communication, framing Gu’s compassionate characters in relaxed but participating dialogue. Bubbly orb shapes proceed in additional fractal formations in “Landline” (2023–24), the exhibition’s most psychedelic work. Two figures, paying homage to ballerinas with refined traces of tutus, lie supine with splayed breasts. Muddy blues and vibrant aubergine shades halo their heads, referencing their “crown chakra,” which relates to connection, desires, and better consciousness.
By changing typical identities with ethereal depictions of energies, moods, and feelings, Gu dismantles preconceived notions of their figures’ relationship to one another. In Pure Coronary heart Corridor, Gu breathes life into the corporeal essence of their characters.


Xingzi Gu: Pure Coronary heart Corridor continues at Lubov gallery (5 East Broadway #402, Decrease East Facet, Manhattan) by means of June 22. The exhibition was organized by the gallery.