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Cai Guo-Qiang. (Reviews).


SHANGHAI ART MUSEUM The Shanghai Art Museum (上海美术馆) is an art gallery in the city of Shanghai, China. It is located in the former clubhouse building of the Shanghai Racing Club. Today, it stands adjacent to People's Square.  

In his art Cai Guo-Qiang creates a system of poetic analogies by mixing ancient and modern while injecting social commentary and, occasionally, art-historical references. In Dream, 2002, he spread an enormous piece of diaphanous red silk on the floor and deployed four industrial fans to blow air underneath the cloth and set it in motion. The ceiling was festooned with red lanterns evocative of funerary fu·ner·ar·y  
adj.
Of or suitable for a funeral or burial.



[Latin fner
 paper forms from Quanzhou (the city in Fujian province where Cai was born), traditionally used in ritualistic cremations to guarantee smooth passage of the deceased to the afterlife. These typically take the shapes of various man-made objects, but in this case the paper had been shaped into an absurd range of things, including cars, trains, boats, battleships, missiles, and fighter jets as well as pianos and washing machines. Seeing those awkward-looking red objects hovering over the sea of rhythmically moving waves of red silk, one had to laugh, both amused and enchanted en·chant  
tr.v. en·chant·ed, en·chant·ing, en·chants
1. To cast a spell over; bewitch.

2. To attract and delight; entrance. See Synonyms at charm.
.

The Net, 2002, comprised the upside-down skeleton of a sunken ship excavated off the coast of Quanzhou, its hull stuck with golden arrows, and a large birdcage shaped like Shanghai's Longhua pagoda pagoda (pəgō`də), name given in the East to a variety of buildings of tower form that are usually part of a temple or monastery group and serve as shrines. , containing a hundred live canaries; the cage also resembled Marcel Duchamp's Bottle Rack, 1914. The motif of a boat pierced by arrows is familiar from several of Cai's previous works; here it was augmented by a laptop computer suspended under the boat and available for public use. As the wall panel stated: "Here the birdcage is a net, the boat is a net, the computer is a net, the make-shift 'bird catcher' is also a net. And the people have become the target, unwillingly trapped by one type of net for the sake of another." Like the ship, the computer imposes constraints on its users. We circumnavigate cir·cum·nav·i·gate  
tr.v. cir·cum·nav·i·gat·ed, cir·cum·nav·i·gat·ing, cir·cum·nav·i·gates
1. To proceed completely around: circumnavigating the earth.

2.
 the globe while confined to our homes like caged canaries.

Connecting tradition to recent technological developments was particularly apt in Shanghai--China's giant gateway to the outside free-marker economy. It was here, in fact, that Cai's fascination with the carnivalesque--known from his earlier works that featured closely monitored gunpowder explosions--reached spectacular dimensions in a fireworks fireworks: see pyrotechnics.
fireworks

Explosives or combustibles used for display. Of ancient Chinese origin, fireworks evidently developed out of military rockets and explosive missiles and accompanied the spread of military explosives westward to
 project commissioned by OTV OTV Outer Tactical Vest
OTV Otvorena Televizija (Croatian: open television )
OTV On the Vine (Carolina Wine Country News website)
OTV Orange Television (Lebanon TV station) 
 (Oriental Television) for the AsiaPacific Economic Cooperation (APEC APEC
 in full Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation

Trade group established in 1989 in response to the growing interdependence of Asia-Pacific economies and the advent of regional economic blocs (such as the European Union and the North American Free Trade Area)
) summit in 2001. Although Cai's fireworks, accompanied by Beethoven's Ninth, could be perceived as an affirmation of the global economy, as well as of China's aspirations to become a commercial superpower, here the artist managed to subvert their celebratory aspect by combining the video footage with extensive documentation of their manufacture and reception. On display were hundreds of letters, faxes, sketches, and newspaper clippings bearing witness to the bureaucratic red tape behind the APEC extravaganza--an ironic counterpoint to the music's soaring idealism and the flash of pyrotechnics pyrotechnics (pī'rōtĕk`nĭks, pī'rə–), technology of making and using fireworks. Gunpowder was used in fireworks by the Chinese as early as the 9th cent. . The documentation was accompanied by a series of thirteen exquisite drawings executed by exploding gunpowder on rice paper. Like Chinese calligraphy calligraphy (kəlĭg`rəfē) [Gr.,=beautiful writing], skilled penmanship practiced as a fine art. See also inscription; paleography. European Calligraphy


In Europe two sorts of handwriting came into being very early.
, they recorded the search for the perfect balance between precision and spontaneity, clarity and grace. A similar intent lay behind a series of large oil paintings replicating images of explosions from the video recordings of his gunpowder projects. More slapdash slap·dash  
adj.
Hasty and careless, as in execution: slapdash work.

adv.
In a reckless haphazard manner.
 in their execution than the drawings, they marked the artist's return to the medium that he'd employed as a young man before leaving China in 1986.

For the past two years Cai has been collecting paintings and drawings by the Russian artist Konstantin Maximov (1913-94), who came to China as a teacher in the mid-'50s. Cai Guo-Qiang's Maximov Project, 2000-present, so far includes about a hundred works, mostly conventional but well-executed portraits and genre scenes with smiling Chinese workers and many young women, to whom the Russian painter must have been particularly attracted. These were exhibited on easels and accompanied by documentation of the Russian artist's sojourns in China. The collection reflected Communist China's brief period of artistic flirtation with the Soviet Union, which led to the introduction of socialist realism to the world's most populous country. Maximov is a forgotten artist and teacher, but he had an impact on Chinese art that was positive as well as negative. Presenting his works, Cai told me, "is like throwing a hand grenade into an idyllic pond."
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Author:Bartelik, Marek
Publication:Artforum International
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:9CHIN
Date:Jun 22, 2002
Words:688
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