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"The Wall: Reshaping Contemporary Chinese Art"; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo University at Buffalo Anderson Gallery University at Buffalo Art Gallery.


"POOR CHINA!" It is June 2003; Venice is sweltering. A friend and I have traversed the Arsenale and now find ourselves standing before an installation of bright lights and ungainly statuary stat·u·ar·y  
n. pl. stat·u·ar·ies
1. Statues considered as a group.

2. The art of making statues.

3. A sculptor.

adj.
Of, relating to, or suitable for a statue.
 that is meant to evoke the chaotic dynamism of the postmillennial post·mil·len·ni·al   also post·mil·len·ni·an
adj.
Happening or existing after the millennium.

Adj. 1. postmillennial - of or relating to the period following the millennium
 Chinese city. Despite this theme, the work feels inert--showy, but dumb. We grow restless. The aforementioned comment by my companion expresses with sad resignation the view that contemporary art in China cannot hold its own against the more sophisticated endeavors of the West. Not only can it not compete: It is worthy of our sympathy.

Buffalo, January 2006: "The Wall: Reshaping Contemporary Chinese Art"--a survey first presented last summer at Beijing's Millennium Art Museum--is far more promising. The best work among the contributions of some forty-five artists is provocatively conceptual. Song Dong's Together with Farm Workers, 2005, is the video record of an event orchestrated by the artist: Two hundred shirtless male peasants, newly arrived in the capital in search of work, consented to be bound to one another and led around a Beijing art space by Song for a modest fee--a Santiago Sierra--esque tactic with particular resonance in today's rapidly urbanizing China. Zhang Dali's video Face Behind the City. Zhang Dali and Beijing, 2005, documents the destruction of Beijing's ancient neighborhoods as well as the artist's practice of marking these ill-fated sites with graffitied heads that resemble his own in profile, which he then chisels through so as to expose the surrounding ambience: rubble heaps, forlorn imperial structures, and a new species of condominium tower, half-postmodernist, half-"Chinese," that has few rivals for contemporary urban hideousness. The work reiterates the disjointed spatiotemporality of the Chinese city, where the architecture of the imperial and Communist past and that of the capitalist-globalist present are brutally joined, the latter rapidly erasing the former. Xu Bing's Ghosts Pounding the Wall, 1990-91, a rubbing of a single beacon tower of the Great Wall, redefines previous notions of indexicality in art. In this installation, the act of transferring a thing's impression to paper is blown up to monumental proportions (the installation, at a height of thirty feet, fits snugly in the Albright-Knox's sculpture court). The participation of numerous collaborators and the fact that the project took nearly a month to complete recall the actual history of the wall--the thousands of nameless masons involved in its construction over several centuries. A pair of works by Huang Yongping traces the trajectory of a century of contentious US-Sino relations, from imperialism to geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation.

2.
a.
 rivalry: His sculpture 1/4 Hoover Tower, 2005, references Stanford University's creepy edifice of that name, which houses the library of the Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace Hoover Institution on War, Revolution, and Peace, at Stanford, Calif. It was established in 1919 as the Hoover War Library by Herbert Hoover to extend his collection of documents of World War I, but its scope has been expanded to include source material on social and , and also alludes to President Hoover's youthful stint as an engineer working for a private corporation in China from 1899 to 1901, while Bat Project III, 2003, is a replica of the American surveillance plane downed in Chinese territory in April 2001 (the original work, installed at the Millennium Art Museum, was documented photographically for Buffalo).

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These and other works in Buffalo suggested it was not the limitations of Chinese art that my friend and I encountered at Venice but a partial representation of the field itself--a field we could not grasp. That exhibition, "ZOU ZOU Zimbabwe Open University (distance and open-learning; Africa)  (Zone of Urgency)," curated by Hou Hanru, represented a "Pop" or realist sensibility in Chinese practice that can be traced to the Capitalist Realist paintings of the early '80s; it also put forward a futurist, Koolhaasian vision of the new Chinese city. "The Wall" reflected by contrast the Conceptualist con·cep·tu·al·ism  
n.
1. Philosophy The doctrine, intermediate between nominalism and realism, that universals exist only within the mind and have no external or substantial reality.

2.
 interests of its organizer, Gao Minglu, one of the curators of "China/Avant-Garde" (the first official show of advanced Chinese art at the National Museum in Beijing, mounted in the months before the events of Tiananmen Square in 1989) and a cocurator of the Queens Museum of Art's 1999 "Global Conceptualism conceptualism, in philosophy, position taken on the problem of universals, initially by Peter Abelard in the 12th cent. Like nominalism it denied that universals exist independently of the mind, but it held that universals have an existence in the mind as concept. : Points of Origin, 1950s-1980s." Beyond suggesting a difference in taste, the Venice/Buffalo comparison inspires a reflection on the exhibition form within the current "global" scenario. The internationalization The support for monetary values, time and date for countries around the world. It also embraces the use of native characters and symbols in the different alphabets. See localization, i18n, Unicode and IDN.

internationalization - internationalisation
 of the art scene in the past fifteen years, propelled by an extraordinary increase in the number of biennials and triennials, has produced an explosion of information. A viewer must assimilate not only the usual crop of "new" artists but entire national cultures in a bewildering be·wil·der  
tr.v. be·wil·dered, be·wil·der·ing, be·wil·ders
1. To confuse or befuddle, especially with numerous conflicting situations, objects, or statements. See Synonyms at puzzle.

2.
 and constant flow. All to the good; the Westernist myopia myopia: see nearsightedness.  of yesteryear, which folded late modernism into postmodernism, establishing a straight line from Jules Olitski to Sherrie Levine, may be happily discarded. But this expanded arena means that a spectator unfamiliar with a particular tradition--me, for example, wandering haplessly around the Central Asian pavilion at last year's Venice Biennale--needs guidance. "Globalism glob·al·ism  
n.
A national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence.



glob
" requires a new kind of critical competence, an agility in comprehending a heterogeneous field of production. Thus a special onus is placed on the curator of contemporary art. The task of translation has become paramount. The most relevant curators at present are translators, who are able to transpose trans·pose
v.
To transfer one tissue, organ, or part to the place of another.
 information effectively from one culture to another.

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Gao's practice is paradigmatic See paradigm.  in this regard. It was not so long ago that contemporary Chinese art was little known in the United States. During the late '90s, Gao's "Inside Out: New Chinese Art" (1998) and Wu Hung's "Transience: Chinese Experimental Art at the End of the Twentieth Century" (1999) made these practices newly visible; other exhibitions have followed, most notably Wu and Christopher Phillips's "Between Past and Future: New Photography and Video from China" (2004). (It is surely not coincidental that scholarship on Chinese art has flowered in recent years, under the aegis of such scholars as Wu and Jonathan Hay.) Like "Between Past and Future," "The Wall," impressively staged at three sites across Buffalo, suggested a new level of ambition in the presentation of contemporary Chinese art on these shores. This ambition is also apparent in the catalogue: Conceived "not merely" as an exhibition record, the author states, but as "a concise history" of the country's art since the end of the Cultural Revolution in 1976, it is an audacious effort. Although its concordance concordance /con·cor·dance/ (-kord´ins) in genetics, the occurrence of a given trait in both members of a twin pair.concor´dant

con·cor·dance
n.
 with the exhibition is not always clear (there are no entries for specific works), the text, a detailed survey of the past thirty years of Chinese visual art, performance, and artists' films (the latter chapter written by the show's assistant curator, Bingyi Huang), is hugely informative. It enumerates the aesthetic impulses that subtend sub·tend  
tr.v. sub·tend·ed, sub·tend·ing, sub·tends
1. Mathematics To be opposite to and delimit: The side of a triangle subtends the opposite angle.

2.
, and the sociopolitical so·ci·o·po·li·ti·cal  
adj.
Involving both social and political factors.


sociopolitical
Adjective

of or involving political and social factors
 contexts that gave rise to, each development--such as the transition during the late '70s and early '80s from state-supported Socialist Realism to post-Communist realist forms ("Scar Painting" and "Rustic Painting"), and the invention of a language-based Conceptualism by Huang, Xu, and Wu Shanzhuan during the "Cultural Fever," the period of student agitation that began in the mid-'8os and concluded in the tragedy of Tiananmen Square. The text also draws helpful distinctions between Chinese and Euro-American practice, noting, for example, that the work of Huang and Xu bears more correspondence with the Buddhist calligraphic cal·lig·ra·phy  
n.
1.
a. The art of fine handwriting.

b. Works in fine handwriting considered as a group.

2. Handwriting.
 tradition and concept of nothingness noth·ing·ness  
n.
1. The condition or quality of being nothing; nonexistence.

2. Empty space; a void.

3. Lack of consequence; insignificance.

4. Something inconsequential or insignificant.
 (wu) than with Western precepts of seriality and idea art--as Xu's Book of the Sky, 1987-91, a long scroll printed with Chinese "characters" of the artist's invention, suggests.

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Gao is an avant-gardist of the old school. He believes in the notion of artistic autonomy and, moreover, sees his own practice in this light (he is not shy about mentioning his participation in the movements he describes, or that he was the first to identify them). The story of Chinese art, as he tells it, is a narrative of resistance and assimilation: Critical practice flourished in China from the end of the Cultural Revolution through the early '90s (the era of such autonomous activities as Artist Villages and Apartment Art), only to collapse in the last decade after its official embrace by the once oppressive Ministry of Culture and the China Artists' Association. Gao's citation of Renato Poggioli's 1962 theorization the·o·rize  
v. the·o·rized, the·o·riz·ing, the·o·riz·es

v.intr.
To formulate theories or a theory; speculate.

v.tr.
To propose a theory about.
 of the avant-garde as an "antagonistic" practice may seem quaint to Western readers, until we read of the pressures faced by Chinese artists operating under extremely authoritarian circumstances. As Gao suggests, it wasn't until the mid-'70s that a Chinese neo-avant-garde could even be conceived. And even when it began to take concrete shape (an exhibition of Robert Rauschenberg's work at the National Museum in 1985, the first by a contemporary American artist, was a turning point, marking the beginning of the brief pre-Tiananmen artistic ferment that Gao has dubbed the "'85 Movement"), it faced constraints and dangers unknown in the West. Periodic moments of freedom were followed by recurring crackdowns. "China/Avant-Garde" was closed twice: the first time after two of the participants fired gunshots into their installation, the second after a bomb threat. A line in "The Wall" catalogue's chronology clarifies, in the most dramatic terms, why the concept of an antagonistic-avant-gardism could still resonate in China in 1990: "As a result of the post-Tiananmen tightening ... idealist avant-garde activity in China declines drastically.... The most popular art journal, Art Monthly, which had devoted considerable attention to the '85 Movement, is restaffed with conservatives. One of its editors, Gao Minglu, is ordered to stop all editorial work and spend more time at home studying Marxism."

The task of translation is to make another language, or culture, comprehensible; "The Wall" was most effective in this regard, elucidating the specific character of contemporary Chinese society. While the neoliberal ne·o·lib·er·al·ism  
n.
A political movement beginning in the 1960s that blends traditional liberal concerns for social justice with an emphasis on economic growth.



ne
 concept of globalism holds out the promise of universal interconnectedness and economic parity, critical accounts of the phenomenon stress the way globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 elides cultural difference and fosters uneven growth. Many of the works in the exhibition confirmed the latter view. China's transformation into a capitalist superpower and its rapid urbanization have been much touted, yet the actual effects of this transition on the Chinese population have yet to be fully assessed. Rem Koolhaas's ecstatic paeans to the Pearl River Delta The Pearl River Delta Region (PRD) in China occupies the low-lying areas alongside the Pearl River estuary where the Pearl river flows into the South China Sea. Since the "Open Door Policy" was adopted by the Communist Party of China in the late 1970s, the portion of the delta in  megalopolis megalopolis (mĕgəlŏp`lĭs) [Gr.,=great city], a group of densely populated metropolitan areas that combine to form an urban complex.  ring hollow as we contemplate Wang Jingsong's photomontage pho·to·mon·tage  
n.
1. The technique of making a picture by assembling pieces of photographs, often in combination with other types of graphic material.

2. The composite picture produced by this technique.
 One Hundred Chai--To Be Demolished, 1999 (chai is the character used to mark condemned buildings), or Zhan Wang's Urban Landscape, 2002-2005, a tableau of metal cookware that bears an uncanny resemblance to the ugly new towns that have mushroomed across the countryside. Chen Qiulin's video Farewell My Concubine CONCUBINE. A woman who cohabits with a man as his wife, without being married. , 2002, centers on the inundation INUNDATION. The overflow of waters by coming out of their bed.
     2. Inundations may arise from three causes; from public necessity, as in defence of a place it may be necessary to dam the current of a stream, which will cause an inundation to the upper lands;
 of her hometown following the construction of the Three Gorges Dam Three Gorges Dam, 607 ft (185 m) high and 7,575 ft (2,309 m) long, on the Chang (Yangtze) River, central Hubei prov., China, 30 mi (48 km) W of Yichang. The largest concrete structure in the world, the dam was constructed from 1994 to 2006. , while Wang Bing's film Tiexi District (Tie Xi Qu: West of the Tracks), 2003, traces the fates of several mining families after the closing of the state-owned companies that employed them; they live without electricity until forced from their homes by developers. Such works suggest that the critical tendency remains significant in Chinese art, despite the decline of the self-conscious avant-gardism so meticulously documented, and extolled, by this remarkable exhibition.

JAMES MEYER IS ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR OF ART HISTORY AT EMORY UNIVERSITY. (SEE CONTRIBUTORS.)
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Author:Meyer, James
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Apr 1, 2006
Words:1803
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