China’s Artistic Diaspora
For sixty years, upheavals in Chinese politics have not only remade the country’s economy–they have remade Chinese art
- By Christina Larson
- Smithsonian.com, May 02, 2008, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Today another era in contemporary Chinese art is beginning. After two decades in which artists primarily left China, the Middle Kingdom is starting to exert a greater gravitational pull. In recent years, Beijing has stopped enforcing some restrictions on public art displays, and a growing number of regional governments now see creative industries as potential economic engines. The government of Shanghai, for example, recently gave avante-garde artist Cai Guo-Qiang the opportunity to do something impossible in virtually any other major metropolis—to stage a massive pyrotechnics display on the downtown waterfront—for the purpose of impressing visitors to that year's APEC summit.
International galleries, meanwhile, are now deliberately showcasing the work of more artists who reside inside China. In February, the Chinese Contemporary Art Gallery in Manhattan hosted an exhibit opening for Tu Hongtao, a 31-year-old painter from southwest China. When Tu explained his work to prospective collectors, he didn't talk about politics, but instead about the cultural ramifications of how "China's cities are growing so quickly." (Pointing to one painting of a woman lying on a steel-frame bed in a vast snowy landscape, he said, "I try to understand how we can find ourselves inside the city, and outside the city.") The gallery's director, Ludovic Bois, refers to younger Chinese artists interpreting the country's current social and economic upheavals as members of the "cartoon and chaos generation."
Indeed, the exhilarating pace of cultural combustion in modern China is even luring some diaspora artists back home. In January, Xu Bing accepted a post as a vice president of his alma mater, the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing. Although he will still maintain a studio in New York, he says he will now spend the majority of his time in China. Reflecting on his time abroad he told me, "I've been able to do things outside China that I couldn't have otherwise done," but now it is time "to return to Chinese soil … that is where the energy is, where history is happening. There are so many multiple cultural layers—it is something really new."
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Comments (2)
I had been teaching and doing archaeological research in China since 1980. I witnessed the development of art in China since Deng Xiaoping announced the Market Socialim. I met with Chinese artists who returned to China, and also saw the gradual changes in art in China. I presented in Shanghai in ICAS 4 international conference a paper on Chinese art and cultural develeopment since the Death of Mao. It was highly commented in the Shanghai English Language Newspaper. I will be in China from May 30 to September 29. After this date I will be available to speak about it, if I am invited.
Posted by Dr. Alfonz Lengyel, RPA on May 22,2008 | 12:48 PM
I think that it is very interesting to see the clash of cultures and the way China views artistic portraits. I think of chinese artists as making pix of chairman
Posted by ke Gordon on May 17,2008 | 04:46 PM