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Two
Swift Decades One Incredible Art Scene
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| Today's
Ball Party |
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When
viewed in the context of history, the twenty-year
development of contemporary Chinese art is but a
blink of the eye, yet in terms of personal experience,
it records the era in which my generation grew up.
It captures our pains and gains, achievements and
frustrations, happiness and bitterness.
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| Chinese-Painting-Series-Lan |
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In
Beijing in the late 1970s, I was still in junior
high school but was already fascinated by fine art.
I studied painting at Haidian Children's Palace
in the far northwest corner of Beijing and would
often cycle from the Fragrant Hills to the China
Art Gallery, to the gallery of the Central Academy
of Fine Arts, and to the Imperial Ancestral Temple
(Tai Miao) within the Forbidden City, to visit art
exhibitions. I have vivid memories of the Stars
Group painting exhibition and the Democracy Wall
that appeared during that time in 1979. The Stars
Group exhibition, which was held in late 1979, demonstrated
the sensitive and courageous attempts of these young
artists to break away from the ruling ideology.
From exhibiting on the walls outside the China Art
Gallery, to being banned and then finally being
admitted into the national gallery, the exhibitions
and activities of the Stars Group, and their spiritual
allies, the obscure poets Bei Dao and Yang Lian,
reflected warfare between two forces. The Stars
naturally dissolved as the main participants, Wang
Keping, Ai Weiwei, Qu Leilei and Ma Desheng, went
abroad and settled down in foreign lands.
Closely following the Stars Group came the styles
of Scar and Country Life Painting led by artists
living in the southwestern provinces of China. Luo
Zhongli, Cheng Conglin, Ai Xuan, He Duoling and
Chen Danqing initiated these schools. They painted
the life of minority peoples and villagers in the
remote areas where they had spent years of their
youth ploughing the land, as a record their own
experiences during the Cultural Revolution, and
a reflection upon life's hardships and bitterness.
Luo Zhongli's Father and Chen Danqing's Tibet Series
are masterpieces of this school of painting. I clearly
remember when Father was hung in the main exhibition
hall of the China Art Gallery. The peasant's deep
eyes and weather-beaten face drew many people to
stand long in contemplation before him.
In
late 1985, the American artist Robert Rauschenberg
showed a range of his works at the China Art Gallery.
It was the first time in fifty years that a Chinese
audience was brought face to face with modern American
artworks. The exhibition halls were crowded with
people who felt refreshed by a totally new form
of art that they did not quite yet understand. It
served to excite young Chinese artists' enthusiasm
to learn from him, and the show proved a stimulant
to the nascent avant-garde movement. Overnight,
a number of Chinese artists began producing 'ready-mades'
and installations, and hundreds of avant-garde art
groups and experimental art exhibitions appeared.
I was then studying in Nankai University in Tianjin,
and the weekly China Fine Art Newspaper provided
me with all the latest trends in the new art. Together
with the emerging avant-garde, modern western art
works and the range of art theory that was introduced
in large quantities - even though much of it was
poorly translated - constituted an important part
of the heated discussions that began to take place
about traditional and modern, eastern and western
art across China.
The
avant-garde movement culminated in the China Avant-Garde
Exhibition held at the China Art Gallery in February
1989. Organized by ten young art theorists, more
than three hundred works by almost one hundred avant-garde
artists from all over China filled the exhibition
halls. The show was important in offering an unprecedented
review of avant-garde art in China to that date.
Although I was not directly involved in the exhibition,
excited, yearning, yet hypercritical like those
artists, I witnessed the drama of the exhibition
came in for criticism. Later, the art critics Gao
Minglu, Hou Hanru, Zhou Yan and Kong Chang'an, and
the artists Xu Bing, Huang Yongping and Wu Shanzhuan
went abroad and the curtain fell on the first act
of the great avant-garde movement.
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Imigrate
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In
the early 1990s, a new generation of artists began
to emerge. They were represented by young teachers
at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Bejing, like
Liu Xiaodong, Yu Hong, Wang Hao, Shen Ling, Wang
Yuping, and Wang Jinsong and Wang Yousheng, who
made their debut in New Generation, an exhibition
shown at the History Museum in Beijing in 1991.
The 'satirical realists' were represented by Fang
Lijun, Liu Wei and Yue Minjun, whilst the pop artist
Representatives was Wang Guangyi, Zhang Peili, Ren
Jian, Yu Youhan, Geng Jianyi, and Wang Ziwei. The
'new generation' artists' approach to realism relied
on personal technique as they depicted the routines
of daily life. They placed great emphasis on the
need to explore artistic language, ignoring spiritual
pursuits. The satirical artists expressed a sense
of malaise and loss, reflected in their use of distortion.
'Pop' artists used popular and easily recognizable
symbols to illustrate changing attitudes towards
the socio-economic situation. These three schools
of painting became the standard image of Chinese
avant-garde art within the international art scene
in the early 1990s.
Meanwhile, a new school emerged in Chinese ink painting,
the new literati represented by Zhu Xinjian. The
artists of the school emphasized tradition and paid
much attention to the control of brush and ink.
The majority of their paintings concern their personal
life and interests and as a result, critics accused
the new literati of not caring about social problems.
Part of the reason for their lack of social awareness
derived from a sense of futility with the world.
However, the attitude of these artists was undeniably
representative of the thinking in some quarters.
In
the mid-1990s, the new genre of 'gaudy' art emerged
out of the pop art trend, represented by Xu Yihui,
Liu Zheng, the Luo Brothers, Wang Qinsong, Yang
Wei and Qi Zhilong. Many of their works reveal the
obvious influence of controversial American kitsch
artist Jeff Koons, as well as reflecting the prospering
Chinese economy in a tendency toward a secular and
vulgar art. A further aspect of the art of the mid-1990s
was the flourishing of performance art and conceptual
photography. Performance artists included Zhang
Huan, Ma Liuming and Cang Xin. Since 1995, photography
had been developed as a conceptual medium, of which
Wang Jinsong's Standard Family is an outstanding
example. At that time I was in the United States
studying contemporary art criticism and curatorial
studies, but each move on the domestic or international
scene by Chinese artists attracted my attention.
In
the summer of 1998 I returned to Beijing from New
York just in time to catch the next new wave in
contemporary Chinese art. Some young artists were
exploring new media such as video, installation
and the Internet, and artists and curators were
staging various exhibitions that utilized the increasingly
influential media to widen their influence. Zhang
Peili was the first artist to explore the potentials
of video in China. He completed his first video
artwork titled Standard Pronunciation in 1986. Other
influential video artists include Song Dong, Qiu
Zhijie, Wang Gongxin, Zhao Liang, Wu Ershan, Weng
Fen, Yang Zhenzhong, and Xu Zhen. As computers became
more readily accessible in China, artists were provided
with a convenient material and technique for their
artistic explorations. In early 2000, artist Huang
Yan organized the first Internet art exhibition
in Changchun, in the far north of China, in which
more than thirty artists participated. These included
Wang Guofeng, Jin Feng, Cang Xin, Zhou Xiaohu, Cao
Kai, and Zhang Tiemei.
After much painful struggle, experimental art in
China is now adopting a calm, pluralist and localized
path to development. Of one thing I am sure: within
the competitive international environment, with
China's artists up against the world's leading artists,
more and more interesting people will emerge and
exciting event will be staged in the field of new
and experimental art in China.

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