Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi

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Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi performing at the Bluecoat Arts Centre, Liverpool
Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi performing at the Bluecoat Arts Centre, Liverpool

Yuan Chai and Jian Jun Xi are two Chinese performance artists, based in Britain, who work together and specialise in art intervention. They have enacted (unofficial) events at the Venice Biennale and the Turner Prize, where in 1999 they jumped onto Tracey Emin's My Bed.

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[edit] Life

At the time of the My Bed incident (below) in 1999, Chai was aged 43 and resident in Stoke Newington. He gained a BA from Maidstone College of Art and graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1991. Both colleges had also been attended by Tracey Emin although she was not a contemporary. Xi (born in China in 1962)[1] was 37, and from Camden Town. He is a Goldsmiths College, University of London graduate.[2]

[edit] Two Naked Men Jump into Tracey's Bed

Their best known performance occurred at 12.58 p.m. on October 25, 1999, when they jumped on Tracey Emin's installation My Bed, a work incorporating an unmade bed, among other memorabilia, in the Turner Prize at Tate Britain. They called their performance Two Naked Men Jump Into Tracey's Bed (although in fact they kept their trousers on). They had in mind including some "critical sex" as they considered "a sexual act was necessary to fully respond to Tracey's piece", although this part of their intention was not fulfilled. A visitor reported, "Everyone at the exhibition started clapping as they thought it was part of the show. At first, the security people didn't know what to do."[2] It was not clear to some whether the action was part of Emin's display or even a protest against the current visit of Chinese President Jiang Zemin.

Another visitor commented, "After a few minutes of hopping about and shouting I think they ran out of things to do. If they had tried to wreck it, or stolen the vodka or her knickers, I might have felt differently. It made my weekend."[3] The men only had time to start a pillow fight and attempt a swig from one of the empty vodka bottles next to the bed, before they were apprehended. The police and security guards were booed when they took the pair away. Chai and Xi were arrested for their action, but no charges were pressed, since neither the "gallery nor the artist had any desire to bring the matter further".[3]

Chai considered that, although Emin's work was strong, it was nevertheless institutionalised and said, "We want to push the idea further. Our action will make the public think about what is good art or bad art. We didn't have time to do a proper performance. I thought I should touch the bed and smell the bed." He had various words written in Chinese and English on his body, such as "Internationalism", "Freedom" and "Idealism". Xi said that the work was not interesting enough and also that he wanted to push it further, increasing its significance and sensationalism. Words written on his body included "Anarchism", "Idealism" and "Optimism".[2]

One of the words prominent along the length of Chai's torso was "Anti-Stuckism". This was surprising as the Stuckists had themselves been critical of Emin's art. However, Chai and Xi's explanation is that they were not anti Emin's type of work (which they merely wanted to "improve"—"We are simply trying to react to the work and the self-promotion implicit in it"), but were opposed to the Stuckists, who are anti-performance art.[4] According to Fiachra Gibbons of The Guardian, the event "will go down in art history as the defining moment of the new and previously unheard of Anti-Stuckist Movement."[3]

The Tate's official pronouncement was "The work has now been restored and the exhibition will open to the public as usual at 10 a.m.", but they would not be drawn on the nature of the restoration.[3]

[edit] Other performances

In 1997 they erected fake street signs in an attempt to mislead high profile visitors to the Venice Biennale. At Goldsmiths College in London they scattered £1,200 around a room to point to the commercialism and greed of the art market (the audience scrambled on the floor to pick up the money).[3]

In spring 2000, the artists returned to the Tate, this time to Tate Modern, in an attempt to urinate into Marcel Duchamp's Fountain, which is a urinal laid on its back and signed "R.Mutt". The Tate denies that they managed to do this.[5] The sculpture is now enclosed in a transparent box.

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