Orange Li Has One Foot in a Subatomic World While Holding Hands With a Faraway Galaxy

A closer look into the transformative journey of the artist and the new series that burst out of the pandemic.

Johnnie Grinder, September 16, 2020

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Orange Li with her paintings at Mana Contemporary (2020). Photo: Johnnie Grinder 

Orange Li’s  journey started as an unwanted girl who was nearly sold by her father. This experience became the seed for her desire to prove her worth to the world. As a child, she searched for female role models, and found there were not many in history to choose from.  She became fascinated with the very limited role models available such as Marie Curie, Coco Chanel, and Frida Kahlo. Later she discovered Hilma af Klint who she felt a deep and surreal connection with. 

The difficult beginnings of her childhood led her into the arts where she learned  to paint her way out of her past. Now after many years and even more struggles we are seeing her work come alive as an ever expanding map of insights and connection, filled with cryptic messages that seem to speak through her delicate brush strokes.

Growing up in Taiwan and then immigrating to the USA has been a challenge,  but it has also given Orange the gift of seeing the world from two perspectives. 

In 2018, in New York, after a painful breakup, financial collapse, and isolated in her studio, she had a major meltdown, not unlike a caterpillar, who turns to goo and then reemerges as a new creature seeing the world with new eyes. I call her experience  a “melt up” because of the positive changes and insights that arose from her experience. It was at this time that she began to pay closer attention to her dreams, and found inspiration flowing freely to her through meditation. Her interests were reignited dramatically at this time into the teachings of ancient philosophers, mythology, physics, astronomy and the natural sciences. As her dream world and intellectual world grew, it began to naturally circulate out of her and onto the canvas.  

Her work reflects a fusion of inner and outer worlds, Eastern and Western thinking and elements, and a unique perspective of the world from a female’s perspective.

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Orange Li, White Tiger, (2020). Courtesy of the artist

This new series was created in the midst of the pandemic, which was a time of social isolation, but also a time of great personal growth. When creating the spirited animals series she noticed that most creatures painted would always depict fierce and tough wildness. Orange realized that these spirit animals were so powerful that they had no need to show their toughness, so she created them with feminine and masculine qualities, being a fine balance between gentle and powerful. She decided that by painting these animals at peace with their environment, she became at peace with herself. With the tiger she went so far as to even have the fur become finely combed, somehow elegant, not wild and unkempt. The soft and tender background colours depict the innocence of a child that contrasts beautifully with the intense symbolism of the animals. 

When I look at the intricate designs and beautifully detailed linework in this series I feel as if the linework is somehow communicating a message that gives different meaning to me every time I look deeply into it. The images are filled with what gives me the sense that we have one foot in a subatomic world, while holding hands with a far away galaxy. 

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  Orange Li, Black Warrior (2020). Courtesy of the artist.

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Elephant Mountain and the Mysterious Collector from Taiwan Part 1

     In 2013 Orange Li and I opened our first art gallery called Steam 33 in Taipei, Taiwan. It was in a busy tourist neighborhood that brought people from all over Asia to collect artwork. While in Taiwan I did commissions and sold originals to collectors in Hong Kong, Shanghai, Tokyo, Malaysia, Singapore, South Korea, and Japan.
    I always rode to work on my bicycle with my little doggy Xiao Hong Doh (Little Red Bean) in the front basket. I would paint the days and nights away in the back of our studio/gallery with our little dog by my side.

Our first gallery in Taipei, Taiwan.

Our first gallery in Taipei, Taiwan.

Elephant Mountain

     One of our first and biggest collectors in Taipei was a confident man named Leo. He worked as a manager in a restaurant at the time. He had never bought a painting before, but after commissioning his first one, the "Cambodian Buddha", he went on to become a passionate art collector.
     Strangely enough at the time of his first purchase he had roommates and not much wall space in his small apartment, but he knew that one day he would have his own place, larger than what he has now and so collected for where he expected to be in the future and not where he was in the moment. The most important thing for him was to acquire the paintings he loved.
     Also he wanted to commission paintings to capture different stages in his life journey. So far he has bought a total of seven paintings, four big commissions, and three originals. 
    One of the paintings he commissioned was simple in idea but it became one of the most popular art prints. It was "Elephant Mountain", which gets its name from the mountain Leo used to hike with his beloved husky. Occasionally he would hike up the beautiful mountain that has a breathtaking view of the city. From this viewpoint you can gaze at the marvels of what was once the tallest building in the world, Taipei's 101. Leo only asked that I include three things in the painting and left the rest up to me. He wanted his husky, his whiskey, and elephant mountain. Though in conversations Leo would talk about finding his "Dream", so I decided to include a doorway to his dreams below him, and the key in his hand. Thus whenever he chose to look for his "Dream" he would easily find it.

     Leo loved to come to our gallery and we would sit around and chat while I would be painting away in the back of the studio. One day he told me that Steam 33 gallery felt like it was a church because the color had a sort of spiritual feeling......... 
    The painting above is one that Leo commissioned so he could remember our  place. He wanted to make this painting because our place, my paintings, and our friendship had become a big part of his life and our life. That really felt amazing and to this day I feel like Leo and Philip will always be one of our tribe.  In the painting he wanted to be in our gallery with, Orange, me, and his partner. I love how the painting came out and it captures the magic of our first gallery and some really good friends.  .........You can spot our little doggy Xiao Hong Doh trying to make an escape in the bottom left corner. 

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Xiao Hong Doh (Little Red Bean)

Xiao Hong Doh
(Little Red Bean)