Click here for a description in Chinese
On the Edge: Contemporary Chinese
Artists Encounter the West will explore recent Chinese
art from a perspective rarely presented
in
the West.
Featuring
experimental
work from the 1980’s through 2004 by 12 of China’s
leading avant-garde artists, it explores the
Chinese artists’ position
in a West-centric global art world, and China’s political
situation in regard to the West. The exhibition aims to replace
old assumptions concerning China’s contemporary art
with a fresh appreciation of its form and substance and of
its interconnectedness with the international art world.
In conjunction with the exhibition, the Davis Museum has
commissioned Chinese artist Xu Bing to realize a site-specific
lobby installation
titled “Any Opinions?”. A key figure in the Chinese
New Wave movement, Xu Bing gained international recognition
for his iconic and monumental installation A Book from
the Sky (1988). His playful, probing and often politically
controversial work earned him the MacArthur Award in 1999. “Any Opinions?” addresses
his fascination with words, calligraphy, the evolution of language
and the juxtaposition of eastern and western culture, and will
be on view from February 15 through June 3, 2006.
"China’s avant-garde artists are doubly marginal. They are marginalized
in their own country, and China’s art is considered marginal by the international
art community," explains Britta Erickson, independent scholar, guest curator
of On the Edge, and one of the leading Western authorities on Chinese
contemporary art. "This has given many Chinese artists — whether living in China
or the West — a heightened appreciation of their tenuous situation. The
result is the creation of a large body of bold experimental works dissecting
the artist’s position in the art world and China’s position in
the world."
Art and politics are inseparable. Chinese artists now in their forties learned
this during their adolescence when Mao’s theories on art shaped the visual
landscape. Younger Chinese artists have become obsessed with a blend of art and
politics — cultural politics — focusing on the positioning of Chinese
art within the global art scene. Artist Zhou Tiehai stated, “The relations
in the art world are the same as the relations between states in the post Cold
War era.”
Just as wealthy nations have controlled trade barriers, tariffs, and other
international trade mechanisms to promote their own interests, Western curators
and critics
have controlled the standards for what is deemed “world class” art.
Some of China’s best artists have reacted to this by producing bitingly
humorous pieces commenting on the situation. On the Edge includes the most
important of these works.
Artists represented in the exhibition include Hong Hao, Huang Yong Ping, Qiu
Zhijie, Sui Jianguo, Wang Du, Xing Danwen, Xu Bing, Yan Lei, Yin Xiuzhen, Zhang
Hongtu, Zhang Huan, and Zhou Tiehai, with works in a full range of materials,
including oil, airbrush, photography, resin, installation, and video. The
West,
an interactive CD-ROM by Beijing-based artist Qiu Zhijie, allows visitors to
explore Chinese ideas of the West, ranging from ridiculous or shocking popular
misconceptions, to historical views.
MacArthur award winner Xu Bing has created
a classroom—included in the exhibition—where visitors can learn
to write Square Word Calligraphy, a method of writing English words as square
graphs
resembling Chinese characters.
On The Edge is curated by Britta Lee Erickson. The Davis Museum’s
Curator of Contemporary Art and Exhibitions, Anja Chávez, curated
the Xu Bing: “Any
Opinions?” installation. The exhibition is accompanied by an illustrated
catalogue, edited by Erickson, which encompasses an introduction to the major
themes and development of Chinese art from the late 1980s, and a focused examination
of the individual artists and works in the exhibition.
Click
here to download a podcast tour of the exhibition with
Curator Britta Erickson
Click here to download a podcast tour of the exhibition
in Mandarin Chinese with Art History Professor HePing Liu
Click here to listen to an interview with artist Xu Bing
On the Edge was organized by the Iris & B.
Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University.
The exhibition and catalogue are made possible
in large part through the generosity of Karen Christensen; an anonymous
donor; the
Shenson Exhibitions Fund; the Center for East Asian Studies, the Office
of the Dean of the School of Humanities and Sciences, and
the Department of
Art and
Art History at Stanford University; The Christensen Fund; the J. Sanford
and Constance Miller Fund; Linda and Tony Meier; Rex
Vaughan; Jean-Marc Decrop;
and Eloisa and Chris Haudenschild.
Sponsored by

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