Massimo De Carlo London is pleased to present The Room Upstairs an exhibition by the Chinese painter Lu Song. Lu Song is based in Beijing, where he returned after graduating from the Wimbledon College of Art London in 2006.

The artist creates evocative acrylic landscape paintings, inspired by 19th century German Romanticism, which focus on the conception and depiction of an idealised place of safety or comfort and the connections and disconnections between humans and nature. For The Room Upstairs the artist has created a new series of canvases that are inspired by the novel 1984 – the dystopian political masterpiece written in 1949 by George Orwell. The author was deeply disturbed by the widespread cruelties and oppressions he observed in communist countries, and was particularly concerned by the role of technology in enabling oppressive governments to monitor and control their citizens.

As put by Lu Song himself: “1984 creates a claustrophobic moment in a monitored era. In the beginning of the story, Winston recognises the absurdity of the era and intentionally looking for memories of the past. In an antique shop, he sees the rooms, paintings, wall clocks and the songs of the old days. He rents the room upstairs and he talks about his views of Inner Party with Julia (the female protagonist), exchanges their views on deceit and shares the imagination of beautiful future. The room symbolizes freedom and excitement; however, everything comes to an end when Winston recognises the truth. He realises the room and everything in the antique shop are traps that the Inner Party set up to rule out dissidents. All surveillance equipment is hidden in the room. The room has turned from an ideal shelter to a terrible trap.”

What attracted the artist to the novel is the tension created by the portrayal of daily lives in the room and it’s hidden implication of danger. The author depicts the room in different paragraphs as the story progresses. The kind of icy warmth, fear of calm, absurdity and mystery, coexistence of intrigue and delusion are brought into some of the works in the exhibition, such as A Pocket of the Past and Beneath the Room further deepens the understanding and experience of the situation. Blurred, incomplete objects on canvas allude to the fragmentation and instability of life. Eight-Thirty is an imagination of the sentiment and ambience of the critical moment before Winston’s arrest. The expressive brushstrokes portray the psychological struggles of character's mind.

The narrative of 1984 also includes a metaphor that refers to Winston's fascination with the glass paperweight, embodied by Lu in the work The Tiny World. The meaning of this object deepens gradually with the plot development, becoming a mean to address inclusion and exclusion, otherworldly feelings of isolation.

In The Room Upstairs dehumanization and fragmentation, manipulation and control, psychological microcosms and socio-political universes are explored through each canvas. The depth of the colours and the strength of each brushstroke evoke a sense of false serenity and veiled thoughts.

Lu Song (b. 1982, Beijing, China) is an artist who lives and works in Beijing. He graduated from the University of Wolverhampton in 2005 with a BFA in Painting and went on to receive an MFA from the Wimbledon College of Art, London, in 2006. He has since exhibited all over the world with shows in Berlin, New York, London, Copenhagen, and Sao Paulo.