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Currently browsing: Past Exhibits
Woodcuts in Modern China, 1937-2008Monday, August 2nd, 2010Towards a Universal Pictorial Language Woodcuts have a long history in China dating at least from the Tang Dynasty (618-907 BCE), and for centuries they have contributed greatly to Chinese print and folk cultures. In the 20th century, woodcuts as an artistic medium underwent a dramatic renaissance that introduced expressionistic and realist techniques into traditional Chinese folk traditions in order to communicate stark messages about China’s social and political states of affairs in an attempt to forge a new nationalistic identity throughout China. Modern Chinese woodcuts provide a dramatic record to chart the 20th century revolutionary causes that profoundly changed Chinese society and culture. The modern woodcut movement of the 1930s introduced an avant-garde expressionism of early revolutionary zeal, whereas woodcuts of the mid-20th century would eventually return to more traditional Chinese folk aesthetics in order for the Communist Party to use woodcut prints as an effective propaganda tool to reach masses of illiterate citizens throughout the countryside. ConfuciusMonday, January 25th, 2010His Life and Legacy in Art One would be hard pressed to identify a more readily recognizable figure in Chinese history than Confucius—his ideas, as transmitted in the Analects and some other documents and then later elaborated upon by other philosophers (such as Mencius and Xunzi), have profoundly shaped Chinese civilization and culture. Given his imposing stature in Chinese history, it is somewhat ironic how little verifiable information is actually known to historians and scholars about the historical Confucius; much of what is commonly presumed about Confucius in the public imagination is distorted by centuries of accumulated legend, veneration, and iconography. The spring 2010 China Institute exhibition, Confucius: His Life and Legacy in Art, assembles a collection of visual representations of Confucius informed by such veneration as well as presenting objects related to the state cult that grew up around him. Humanism in ChinaFriday, September 18th, 2009A Contemporary Record of Photography For Fall 2009, China Institute Gallery has selected one hundred works from the groundbreaking collection of documentary photography at the Guangdong Museum of Fine Arts in Guangzhou. This exhibition, Humanism in China: A Contemporary Record of Photography, features modern masterpieces produced by Chinese photographers between 1951 and 2003. These images express an extraordinary range of human emotions and activities in dramatically different settings – urban and rural, public and private – and are of a high aesthetic order. The Noble Tombs at MawangduiSaturday, May 16th, 2009Art and Life in the Changsha Kingdom, Third Century BCE to First Century CE For the first time ever in the United States, China Institute’s exhibition Noble Tombs at Mawangdui presents over sixty rare artifacts excavated during 1972-74 from one of the most important archaeological sites discovered in the 20th century. Consisting of three tombs in the hill named Mawangdui located near the modern provincial capital of Changsha in the Hunan province, the site has provided a unique window into the beliefs and cultural practices of the early era of the Western Han dynasty (206 BCE-9 CE). The Mawangdui tombs are the resting places of Li Cang, the Marquis of Dai (d. 186 BCE), his wife, Xinzhui, Lady Dai (d. ca. 163), and a third person who is thought to be their son. The Last Emperor’s CollectionFriday, May 15th, 2009Painting and Calligraphy from the Liaoning Provincial Museum The Last Emperor’s Collection features more than twenty-four works of painting and calligraphy from the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties. Since all once belonged to the imperial collection, the exhibition is a broad survey of imperial collecting and connoisseurship. It’s also the story of the tragic loss of these treasures under Puyi (1906-1967), the last emperor of the Qing dynasty, and their journey through the turbulent world of early 20th century China. Beijing 2008: A Photographic JourneyThursday, May 14th, 2009A Web-Companion to China Institute Gallery’s Summer 2008 Exhibition As early as 1906 an article about competitive sports in the magazine Tianjin Youth voiced Chinese aspirations to host the Olympics. The promotion of sports and physical fitness were an important part of China’s efforts to modernize and throw off the yoke of the past—one of Mao Zedong’s first published writings, for instance, was A Study of Physical Education (April 1917). Enchanted Stories: Chinese Shadow Theater in ShaanxiSaturday, October 4th, 2008A Web-Companion to China Institute Gallery’s Spring 2008 Exhibition The magic of the movies had a predecessor in the pre-modern world. For centuries, shadow theater — two-dimensional stick-controlled puppets projected onto a translucent, backlit screen — flourished in India, Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Egypt, Turkey, China, and Europe. All across Eurasia audiences marveled as flickering oil lamps revealed gods and heroes, lovers embracing, and monsters and demons savaging the innocent. Buddhist Sculpture from China: Selections from the Xi’an Beilin Museum Fifth through Ninth CenturiesWednesday, June 4th, 2008A Web-Companion to China Institute Gallery’s Fall 2007 Exhibition Tea, Wine and Poetry: Qing Dynasty Literati and Their Drinking VesselsMonday, June 4th, 2007A Web-Companion to China Institute Gallery’s Spring 2007 Exhibition Shu: Reinventing Books in Contemporary ChinaWednesday, October 4th, 2006A Web-Companion to China Institute Gallery’s Fall 2006 Exhibition |