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The
Long March Space ¡ª The Power of the Public Realm Enters
Its Fourth Phase on January 1st, 2004
Unknown
and Anonymous
On
January 1st, 2004, The Long March Space ¡ª The Power
of the Public Realm will enter its fourth month, Unknown
and Anonymous. Contemporary artists from the city
will join the four public artists already exhibiting
at the Long March Space, creating a dialogue between
amateur and professional, public and elite. At the
same time, the show produces a rare moment when the
general public can participate in a dialogue with
the artists and artworks that has no artificial division,
no distancing, and no alienation. The artists themselves
are as much a part of the public as the viewers are.
With this new phase, we will carry on marching in
our endeavor to peel away the layers of meaning surrounding
the notion of ¡°art¡± and ¡°public¡± while at the same
time building up the public space within the 25000
Cultural Transmission Center.
If
you revisit the Long March Space now, in addition
to the works created by the four artists of phases
one through three of The Power of the Public Realm
(including ¡°Master Photographer of Natural Light¡±
Li Tianbin, ¡°Maxim Mountain¡±¡¯s Jiang Jiwei, Xi¡¯an¡¯s
Master Guo Fengyi, and Yanan¡¯s ¡°King of Clay¡± Wang
Wenhai), you will see that two other elements have
entered the space ¡ª Wang Jinsong¡¯s sound installation
New Long March Slogan and a new Unknown and Anonymous
exhibition. New Long March Slogan consists of readings
of Long March curators¡¯ words mixed together with
excerpts from famous contemporary art texts published
in China. Ten cassette players broadcast Wang Jinsong¡¯s
work in ten different dialects all at once, creating
a mixture of sound and language.
The
¡°Unknown¡± section of Unknown and Anonymous is made
up of a sculpture created in a small village in Hebei
as a piece of mass-produced merchandise ¡ª a fake antique.
The work was meant to cater to people¡¯s imagination
of ancient China, but it is a misinterpretation, imitations
of a hodgepodge of ancient Chinese and Buddhist imagery.
The statue itself is supposed to represent Buddha,
but the body of Buddha is in the form of a female
nude covered with the marks of acupuncture ¡ª a very
contemporary representation of the image of ¡°China¡±
that lies within the collective¡¯s imagination.
The
work that represents the ¡°Anonymous¡± portion of the
exhibition consists of a classical style ink painting
of a partially nude female. Dressed in a red halter
with blue print linen trousers, her clothes are those
of a village girl, but the model herself is a refined
urban woman. She reclines on a classical daybed and
holds a round-style fan idly by her side ¡ª these two
elements even further demonstrate the exertion of
Chinese cultural symbols. Through research, it is
apparent that this work was made by a highly-skilled
traditional painter, but the piece itself is commercial,
falling outside of the literati community because
of the model¡¯s erotic nudity. It was made for a flea
market in Beijing, thus its creator chose to remain
anonymous.
The
curator Lu Jie purchased these two works from Beijing¡¯s
Panjiayuan flea market for foreign tourists and exhibits
them at the Long March Space to explore a topic that
is a one of the core issues of the Long March project
¡ª authorship. Works by unknown and anonymous artists
flood our visual culture and are constantly consumed
by the market. Contemporary artists are also part
of the market system, but at the same time, they carry
the heavy burden of being responsible for reconstructing
culture. Artists/market systems/exhibition systems,
unknown/anonymous/collective: these two sets can be
explored merely as contrasts, but the relationship
contained within and between the sets have profound
meaning in China¡¯s visual culture. In this exhibition
especially, we display works created under all different
authorship circumstances in order to explore the relationship
that lies between artists, the market, and exhibition
systems. In China¡¯s historical and revolutionary traditions,
there are many masterpieces with collective, unknown,
and anonymous creators, and they are a main element
in public discourse. With The Power of the Public
Realm exhibition, the 25000 Cultural Transmission
Center continues to function as a space in which we
can reflect on contemporary art and visual culture.
For
images, artist profiles, and other information about
this or other Long March exhibitions, please visit
our website at www.longmarchfoundation.org. Thank
you for your support of the Long March project.
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