Product Information
產品資訊
Dedicated to sharing visual culture with the world, M+ offers a wide selection of art prints in various formats, including print, poster, and postcard. Each piece has been chosen from our collection and is currently displayed in the museum.
This print features Fusuijing Building by Zhang Wei, part of the M+ Sigg Collection, Hong Kong. It is printed on quality archival paper, complying with the highest life expectancy of 100+ years. Serving as a quintessential museum keepsake, it can be displayed at home, the office, or wherever visual culture is well received.
Size L and XL are available in physical store. Please contact us for reservation.
This print features Fusuijing Building by Zhang Wei, part of the M+ Sigg Collection, Hong Kong. It is printed on quality archival paper, complying with the highest life expectancy of 100+ years. Serving as a quintessential museum keepsake, it can be displayed at home, the office, or wherever visual culture is well received.
Size L and XL are available in physical store. Please contact us for reservation.
About Artwork
This oil painting portrays the landscape viewed from the window of Zhang Wei’s apartment, where members of the No Name Group, an underground collective of artists in Beijing who sought to create art freely, had discussions and where they held their first exhibition in the mid-1970s. The view depicts a tall, light pink apartment block with bluish-grey windows at right and, at left, the sloping roof of a house partially covered by the railing, trees, and a cloudy sky. The brushstrokes loosely render the forms, giving the painting an impressionistic quality. The colours suggest a dark, private interior, and a light-filled exterior. Zhang intended to contrast the warmth of the apartment with the cool harshness of the political reality outside—the work was painted during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), when official art was used to serve political aims. The painting is characteristic of Zhang’s early works, which are largely still lifes and landscapes. In the 1980s, he developed a spontaneous, gestural, and abstract style of painting.
Size: S (45 x 30 cm), M (60 x40 cm), L (75 x 50 cm), XL (90 x 60 cm)
FANTAC Fine Art Paper, Acid-free, Archival Paper, Long Life Certificate, certified in compliance with IOS 9706
Print: Digital
Origin: Hong Kong
Care: Display proundly
This oil painting portrays the landscape viewed from the window of Zhang Wei’s apartment, where members of the No Name Group, an underground collective of artists in Beijing who sought to create art freely, had discussions and where they held their first exhibition in the mid-1970s. The view depicts a tall, light pink apartment block with bluish-grey windows at right and, at left, the sloping roof of a house partially covered by the railing, trees, and a cloudy sky. The brushstrokes loosely render the forms, giving the painting an impressionistic quality. The colours suggest a dark, private interior, and a light-filled exterior. Zhang intended to contrast the warmth of the apartment with the cool harshness of the political reality outside—the work was painted during the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976), when official art was used to serve political aims. The painting is characteristic of Zhang’s early works, which are largely still lifes and landscapes. In the 1980s, he developed a spontaneous, gestural, and abstract style of painting.
Size: S (45 x 30 cm), M (60 x40 cm), L (75 x 50 cm), XL (90 x 60 cm)
FANTAC Fine Art Paper, Acid-free, Archival Paper, Long Life Certificate, certified in compliance with IOS 9706
Print: Digital
Origin: Hong Kong
Care: Display proundly