YunPing Li
YunPing Li (Hubei, China, 1998) is a visual artist based in Madrid. His work focuses on self-representation of Queer and BIPOC communities through photography. He investigates the intersection between the photographic medium and performance, as well as exploring the concept of belonging in relation to the human body, physical spaces, and family ties. He is author of 回家 (huí jiā).
Email: contact@yunpingli.com
CV
Instagram
Work
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回家 (huí jiā)
- Self-Portraiture Performance
- Mā (媽)
Ongoing research
I belong to the first generation of people internationally adopted from China to Spain during the 2000s. Mā (媽) is a visual project centred on the search for my biological mother by depicting her through myself, with the aim of rethinking and challenging the idea of the family photo album.
I aim to generate a photographic archive of my biological mother through
self-portraiture, characterization, and staging, thus blending research, imagination, reality and fiction. The title refers to the affectionate way of addressing the mother in Chinese, which coincides with the colloquial English and Spanish term ma' (and, likewise, with the term 媽 媽 māma, meaning “mother”).
The project is situated within the historical context of China’s One-Child Policy, implemented between 1979 and 2015 as a measure of demographic control. As a result, between 1980 and 2014, 324 million intrauterine devices were fitted, 108 million sterilisations were carried out, and more than 330 million abortions were performed. Around two million girls (AFAB) were abandoned; approximately 120,000 of them were ultimately adopted by foreign families. In Spain, close to 18,000 adoptions took place.
As a trans man, I am interested in exploring the image of my pregnant body and its relationship to femininity, whereas as an adoptee, I wish to create an archive and a memory of my origins. I intend to question the predominant narrative of adoption, primarily constructed by adoptive families and adoption agencies: a narrative that begins with the creation of a new family while overlooking the losses that precede it. I find it essential to address the loss and separation from the biological family, the community, the language and the culture of origin. I aim to contribute to the destigmatisation of adoption and, with it, the maternal figure demonised for abandoning her baby.
Chinese Passport (2000)
"Chinese Passport refers to one of the legal procedures involved in carrying out an international adoption. More specifically, it is the document that adoptive parents complete during their visit to the country where the adoption will take place. This document allows them to stay there and officially reflects the legality of the adoption process."Adoption Data Sheet (1998)