Exodus II: Unhinging the Great Wall
Duration: March 15, 2020 — April 30, 2021
Venue: WhiteBox, New York
Exhibited Work: Tower (Babel) Records
Unhinging the Great Wall: Chinese Art Revealed will focus on the first wave of Chinese immigrants to NYC in the 1980s, with many artists settling in the East Village. Many of these artists have come to represent the face of Chinese contemporary art and influence creative expression in China and other countries, weaving together newfound influences from the Western art canon with traditional Chinese art and culture.
Spotlight on a New Generation: Contemporary Chinese Artists
Duration: February 6, 2029 — November 1, 2020
Venue: Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio
Exhibited Works: Square Word Calligraphy: Quotations from Chairman Mao and Five Series of Repetition
In the last 100 years, China has undergone dramatic changes, including the emperor’s abdication in 1912, the establishment of the Republic of China (1912–49), the Communist takeover under Mao Zedong in 1949, the Cultural Revolution (1966–76), and the establishment of reforms after Mao’s death in 1976.
Today, China is among the world’s fastest growing economies, becoming a global leader in renewable energy, artificial intelligence, and green technology. Its relevance in the art world also grows as Chinese contemporary artists have gained international recognition.
Image courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Art
The Allure of Matter: Material Art from China
Duration: February 7, 2020 — August 2, 2020
Location: Smart Museum of Art, Chicago
Exhibited Works: Tobacco Project — 1st Class, Traveling Down the River, Tobacco Book, and sketches.
Since the 1980s, Chinese contemporary artists have cultivated intimate relationships with their materials, establishing a framework of interpretation revolving around materiality. Their media range from the commonplace to the unconventional, the natural to the synthetic, the elemental to the composite: from plastic, water, and wood to hair, gunpowder, and Coca-Cola. Artists continue to explore and develop this creative mode, with some devoting decades of their practice to experiments with a single material. The Allure of Matter coins the term “material art” to denote this trend in contemporary Chinese artmaking.
The concept of Material Art is related not only to the general term “materiality” in contemporary art, but also refers more specifically to artworks with the goal of making “matter” the primary vehicle of philosophical, political, sociological, emotional, and aesthetic expression. Some of these works reject constructed forms altogether, but most reverse or problematize the conventional relationship between medium and representation. In either case the material (and related technology) becomes the message. The conditions of contemporary Chinese art offer reasons for the prevalence of Material Art and its continuous relevance, which has been developed to fulfill two simultaneous objectives of disavowing established art forms and inventing new artistic languages.
The Allure of Matter features 35 works from 21 of the most important and influential Chinese artists working today, including Ai Weiwei, Cai Guo-Qiang, Lin Tianmiao, Song Dong, Xu Bing, Yin Xiuzhen, Zhan Wang, Zhang Huan, and more. The works are selected based on their historical importance, representativeness, and visual quality. Created from the late-1980s to the present day, the works include two-dimensional, three-dimensional, and new media works that are complementary in form, material, and visual effect.
Xu Bing's Tobacco Project, a personal and historic multi-part exploration of tobacco. Four elements of this work are featured in the exhibition: Tobacco Book (2011), Traveling Down the River (2004), a series of sketches (all completed between 1999 and 2000), and a larger-than-life tiger skin carpet made entirely of cigarettes, 1st Class (1999–2011). The project orignates from Xu’s residency at Duke University in 2000, where he took interest in the history of the Duke family, who made much of their fortune manufacturing and marketing cigarettes in the late 19th century. During this residency, Xu learned about all aspects of tobacco production, from historical to contemporary, and began this series of works made of and about the tobacco trade. The artist took a particular interest in the introduction of American tobacco businesses in China in the late 19th century, and their lasting effect on his home country, both socially and economically.
Image courtesy of the Smart Museum of Art
In Real Life
Duration: January 16, 2020 — March 22, 2020
Location: The Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago
Exhibited Work: Dragonfly Eyes
As the powerful technology behind artificial
intelligence grows more sophisticated, machines have developed the capacity to not only capture
images but to “see” them as well. In Real Life is an exhibition seeking to examine the real-world
impact of computer vision—from the murky ethics of data collection and surveillance to the racial
and gender biases that abound in facial recognition technology.
Image courtesy of the Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago