Twenty Years of Chinese Contemporary Art on View at National Art Center in Tokyo |
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| Written by Arnold Campbell |
| Monday, 25 January 2010 01:45 |
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Starting in the mid-1980s, various avant-garde groups were formed simultaneously throughout the country in the huge groundswell known as the “’85 New Wave Movement.” As the volume of information flowing in from the West increased, these new artists expressed social themes gripping China through not only painting and sculpture but also new forms, such as video performance and installation art. This period also saw the rise of artists like Cai Guoqiang and Huang Yong Ping, who relocated their activities overseas. In the early 1990s a number of artists began to work in styles like “Political Pop” and “Cynical Realism,” and China’s contemporary art began gaining recognition abroad. Subsequently, more radical works of performance and video art started to emerge. Buoyed by waves of globalization since 2000, an active global art market, and expanding popularity of international exhibitions, contemporary Chinese art has become recognized as a cultural symbol of China’s reforms. “AVANT-GARDE CHINA: Twenty Years of Chinese Contemporary Art” takes a look at the progression of Chinese art over the past 20 years, starting from the 1980s. The exhibition focuses on representative works from artists deserving of particular attention and includes established artists as well as promising new talent. Exhibition Highlights Japan’s first all-encompassing, historically comprehensive introduction to Chinese contemporary art In the mid-1990s, China’s “Cynical Realism” and performance art were introduced in Japan, and works by young artists were shown at Yokohama Triennales and various exhibitions of Chinese art in the following decade. However, this will be the first exhibition in Japan to comprehensively present works from artists who symbolize the roughly two decades of Chinese contemporary art. Works originating in China Some Chinese contemporary artists moved their activities to the United States, Europe, or Japan and have received critical praise. This exhibition, however, focuses on artists who have created and unveiled their works of art in China in order to present them as a mirror of Chinese society and culture. It is through such works that the period of upheaval, ushered in by the reform and open-door policy in the 1980s, can be revealed as realistically as possible. The Artists On display will be works by 14 artists (counting a 2-person collaboration singly) and 2 artistic groups. Huang Yong Ping (b. 1954), Wang Guangyi (b. 1957), Zhang Peili (b. 1957), Ding Yi (b. 1962), Zhang Xiaogang (b. 1958), Fang Lijun (b. 1963), Tactile Art, Xinkedu Group, Gu Dexin (b. 1962), Ma Liuming (b. 1969), Zhang Huan (b. 1965), Sun Yuan and Peng Yu (b. 1972/1973), Yang Zhenzhong (b. 1968), Yang Fudong (b. 1971), Cao Fei (b. 1978), Xu Zhen (b. 1977) Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
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