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Art
scene has rosy future
From
Chinese artist Cai Guoqiang to British sculptor
Henry Moore; from the reclaiming of lost treasures
overseas to the headache of fake art in the domestic
market; from debates over modern art and Chinese
paintings to the emergence of art websites and new
media art...
The Chinese art scene last year was eventful, fascinating
and yet controversial.
This can be seen by a survey released following
the 2000 Chinese Art Elites Annual Conference in
Chengdu, the capital of Southwest China's Sichuan
Province. The report selected the most influential
events, the most noticeable people and the most
active organizations on the art stage within China
last year.
The meeting and survey were organized by the "Art
and Artists" programme of the China Central
Television (CCTV) together with the Chengdu Museum
of Modern Art and the website art-w.com.
The
nationwide survey was carried out among art experts
in December and last month and found that most art
events in China happen in national and international
art centres such as Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu,
Guangzhou and Shenzhen.
The Shanghai Biennale 2000 was unanimously agreed
to be the most significant exhibition in China's
contemporary art world last year. The Biennale also
topped the list in another poll organized by the
art website CL2000.com.
The country's first major official modern art show
since the 1990s, the Biennale took place from November
6 until January 6 at the newly renovated Shanghai
Art Museum. Installations, videos, performances,
photography and even architectural works made the
debuts in the Biennale.
Praised as a door-opener and "a milestone in
Chinese modern art history" by Zhu Qingsheng,
an art professor at Peking University, the success
of the show demonstrates the increasing cultural
openness of modern China amid the age of globalization.
Primarily because of the Biennale's success and
significance, its curators Hou Hanru, Zhang Qing
and Li Xu were selected as the year's best Chinese
curators and the Shanghai Art Museum was declared
the best Chinese art museum in 2000.
Following the Shanghai Biennale, a number of other
"biennales" have taken place in China,
including the Shenzhen Biennale of ink painting
and the Qingdao Biennale of prints. But none of
them was as influential as the Shanghai one.
Impressed by the worldwide influence of the Shanghai
Biennale, the Chengdu Museum of Modern Art announced
it will organize a "Chengdu Biennale"
starting this year to compete with Shanghai. The
show will mainly focus on emerging young artists,
the museum said.
The
Chengdu museum made its name last January for hosting
the exhibition "Centennial Gate," which
featured works by more than 200 Chinese artists
in the categories of oil painting, sculpture and
installation, ink painting, and calligraphy.
Following the "Centennial Gate," which
looked at Chinese art from 1979-99, a number of
large-scale retrospective exhibitions were held
across the country around the turn of the new millennium.
They included the "Chinese Oil Painting in
the 20th Century" show in Beijing, the "Chinese
Prints in the Past 100 Years" show in Chongqing,
the "Grand Exhibition of New Chinese Painting"
in Shanghai and the "Grand Exhibition of Chinese
Calligraphy in the Past 1,000 Years" in Beijing.
Among the most popular art exhibitions last year
were the Dunhuang art exhibition and solo shows
by Spanish surrealist painter Salvador Dali and
British modern sculptor Henry Moore.
The Dunhuang show highlighted the grandeur of art
treasures in the Dunhuang grottoes in Northwest
China while unfolding their bitter history. The
Dali and Moore shows, however, enabled Chinese art
lovers to have a dialogue with these world masters
up close.
Also notable last year were three art fairs held
in Beijing (August), Shanghai (November) and Guangzhou
(December).
Noticeably, as part of the 2000 China Art Exposition
in Beijing, the Chinese Art Industry Forum 2000
touched on topics such as public art, art and the
Internet, art collecting and art investing, the
art market and art media.
"Art as an industry has emerged into the public
eye in recent years," said forum organizer
Wu Jing. "It has become necessary to examine
the challenges and opportunities facing the industry."
In 2000, domestic collectors stood out as the most
dynamic players in the Chinese art market, suggesting
the great potential and growing maturity of the
domestic market.
During
the Shanghai Art Fair, a sculpture in Rodin's "Thinker"
series was purchased by a Shanghai company for 10
million yuan (US1.2 million). In April, the China
Poly Group in Beijing bought at a Hong Kong auction
four precious relic and art treasures looted by
British and French soldiers from Yuanmingyuan (the
Old Summer Palace) 140 years ago. Also last year,
Shanghai collector Chen Bangke and his company made
news by collecting paintings by Western masters
Picasso and Chagall.
But disorderly practices such as underground sales,
tax evasion and art fabrication in the Chinese art
market remain a headache, experts say. A sensational
scandal last year was that the 70-plus works in
a solo ink painting exhibition of master Chinese
artist Fu Baoshi (1904-65), staged at the Shanghai
Museum, were found all to be fake.
One of the most encouraging new phenomena of 2000
was the emergence of a number of Chinese art websites
that have attracted art lovers and specialists from
home and abroad. Among them are china-gallery.com,
CL2000.com, guaweb.com, tom.com, art-w.com, artnews.com.cn
and chinese-art.com. Among them, chinese-art.com
is in English while china-gallery.com and CL2000.com
have both Chinese and English editions.
Last year, Chinese artists showed a growing interest
in the computer and the Internet. Computer art and
even "Internet art" have entered the sight
of more Chinese artists and are becoming gradually
accepted by the masses.
New York-based Chinese artist Cai Guoqiang became
a household name in China last year, although he
has been well-established in the Western art community
since 1995. In the survey, he tops a list of the
most eye-catching Chinese artists of the year which
also includes Liu Xiaodong, Zhao Bandi, Zhou Chunya
and Mao Yan.
Cai became the focus of national attention because
his award-winning installation and performance project
"Venice's Rent Collection Courtyard" in
the 48th Venice Biennale was accused by the Sichuan
Academy of Fine Arts of infringing upon the copyright
of a similar sculptural work produced in Sichuan
in the 1960s. The original work, "Rent Collection
Courtyard," showing peasants paying tithes
to the feudal lord, was a representative piece of
Chinese socialist art.
The
dispute, later focused on whether the Sichuan academy
has the copyright for the sculpture and whether
there was a misunderstanding of Cai's work, has
no result so far. However, it has initiated heated
discussions among China's art circles on how to
interpret contemporary conceptual art and how to
deal with copyright issues of artwork in a modern
era.
To the surprise of many, veteran Chinese painters
Wu Guanzhong and Zhang Ding, who started a nationwide
debate on what traditional techniques and materials
mean in new Chinese painting, missed the list.
Advocating freedom and novelty in art creation,
the radical Wu criticized traditional techniques
in Chinese painting in a new age. Zhang, on the
contrary, argued that such elements are the "bottomline"
that makes Chinese painting what it is.
The survey found that Xia Junna, 30, was the most
prominent emerging Chinese artist of the year. The
female oil painter, noted for her expressive images
of young women and flowers, has been remarkably
successful in recent years.
According to the survey, the Shanghai Art Museum,
the Chengdu Museum of Modern Art, the Guangdong
Museum of Art in Guangzhou, the Shanghe Art Museum
in Chengdu, and the He Xiangning Art Museum in Shenzhen
were the best Chinese art museums of the year.
Beijing art museums such as the China National Art
Museum and the Yanhuang Art Museum were not included.
"This, in a way, indicates that the facilities
and management of art museums in the Chinese capital
need to improve urgently," said Han Ming, a
Beijing art critic.
Date:
02/12/2001
Author: YANG YINGSHI, China Daily staff
Copyright? by China Daily
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