| Site
1, July 1-7, Ruijin County, Jiangxi Proince
Mao in Yanan, 1937
Li
Shan, "The Rouge Series: No. 8," Oil on
Canvas, 1990
Dong Xiwen,
"Landscape of Ruijin" Oil on Canvas
Leon Trotsky , Problems of Chinese
Revolution,

Vladimir Tatlin, "Elevation
of the Monument to the Third International,"
1919

Dan Flavin, "Monument for
V. Tatlin," 1964

Dan Flavin, "Monument for
V. Tatlin," 1967
Huang Yongping,
"Traces of a Deer and a Crane," Installation,
1999
Jean- Luc Godard,
"La Chinoise,Ħħ 1967

A Village Phorography Master,
Li Tianbing , A Guinness Record Holder
Li
Tianbing, exposing the film to natural light here,
photographed by his son, a photographer, Li Jincheng

Li
Tianbing, developing photos in a creek, photographed
here by
Li Jincheng

Zhang
Defeng Sculpture:Tree-root
carving of Karl Max , 2001
Zhang Defeng Sculpture: Tree-root
carving of Engels, 2001
Zhan
Wang, "The
Fake Ornamental Rock Series,"
Forbidden Citys
Zhan
Wang, "The
Fake Ornamental Rock Series," Beijing
Fu Xinming,
"The Idea of Construction 1,"
Tree-root, 2000
Fu Xinming,
"The Idea of Construction 2,"
Tree-root and Steel, 2000
Fu Xinming,
" The Idea of Construction 3,"
Tree-root and Stainless Steel, 2001
Fu Xinming,
"The Idea of Construction 4, "
Tree-root and Steel , 2001
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History
The
Former Soviet Republic, Ruijin
In
1921, when the Chinese Communist Party was formally
organized, it took the Russian revolution as its
formal modal, focusing on organizing urban workers.
The Communists, viewed themselves primarily as a
reform party that could effect societal change through
peaceful means. Establishing military power was
therefore not a part of their initial agenda. The
Communists quickly suffered the consequences, with
the ruling Nationalist government cracking down
on their activities. Defeated, the Communists were
forced to go underground in foreign-controlled Shanghai.
It was at this time that Mao, unsatisfied with the
urban insurrection policy guided by the Comintern's
representatives in the Communist headquarters in
Shanghai, began to organize peasant revolutions
in the mountains. He believed that a Chinese revolution
could only succeed if initiated by a peasant rebellion.
Through building up small, rural soviets and encircling
the towns and cities, he believed that the Communists
could slowly take over the population centers, systematically
establishing a larger base until becoming powerful
enough to take over the entire country. In 1929,
Mao's
followers from the 'Autumn Harvest Uprising' joined
together and began forming the Red Army, enabling
him to successfully build the Jiangxi Soviet. Mao's
theory of the rural soviet movement, his integration
of Marxist-Leninism with Chinese reality, revived
the Communists' difficult struggle in the urban
area.
ĦĦ

Dong Fang , Cover from the book,
"Trotsky,"
1998
Throughout
the course of Chinese history, peasant uprisings
had repeatedly played a major role in the overthrow
of ruling dynasties. Mao and his followers were
thus looking to China's past
for direction to its future. 'The
Sharing Wealth Party' - the literal English translation
of the Communist party's name,
appropriated the slogan of 'The
Wealth must be Shared' from the Taiping Movement,
which had combined a peasant rebellion with Christian
belief that at one point had taken over half of
Southern China and by 1853 was powerful enough to
establish a capital in Nanjing. The Taipings were
eventually suppressed by the imperial government
and the foreign powers that shared interests in
China, thereby 'postponing'
the Chinese Revolution for sixty years.1
ĦĦ
Wang Ming , "Strike to Bolsheviklize Chinese Communist
Party"
From
a Dialectical Materialist model focussing on the
"moments" of revolution, it is extremely
important to correctly understand the specific stage
of development of the society facing crisis and
the historical stage of that class which might be
the class of revolution. To the Stalinists, China
was a Feudal Society, but to the followers of Trotsky,
the Chinese Capitalist class had already emerged
and therefore the task of revolution was to counter
the capitalists. To Mao, China was a semi-colonial
and semi-feudalistic society. The
Chinese bourgeois-democratic revolution is in essence
a peasant revolution...the basic task of
the Chinese proletariat in the bourgeois-democratic
revolution is therefore to give leadership to the
peasants' struggle.2ĦĦ
Combining Marxism-Leninism and
the Chinese tradition of peasant revolts, Mao's
principle contribution to Communism
was, the proof that in semi-feudal, semi-colonial
countries such as China, a revolutionary Leninist
Party could successfully carry out revolution and
remain Marxist without relying on the proletariat.
Exhibiton
- Revolution
Reading:
Post-Marxist theory, Jacques
Derrida's The
Specters of Marx and Leon
Trotsky's Problem
of Chinese Revolution3
which he began writing in Moscow but finished in
exile in Alma Ata and Turkey. In the realm of Chinese
politics, Trotsky was the most criticized Communist.
From the 30s until recently, being a Trotskist was
equivalent to being dead in Chinese political life.
Trotsky's writing is no
longer banned, but few in China have interest in
reading his texts. Are Maoism and Stalinism orthodox
Marxist communism? Has communism failed, as it is
said?
Show: Jean-Luc
Godard's La Chinoise
of the 60s in the yard of the Red Army headquarters
where the Long March began in 1934. La Chinoise
has never had much visibility in the Chinese art
circle, not to mention the general public. The juxtaposition
of the screening of this particular film, one that
glorifies Mao's revolution
from the perspective of idealistic French youth,
to those who lived the reality of the actual revolution,
and the meaning implicit in the location of the
screening might together intrigue the viewer and
generate contextualized discussion.
Discuss:
Vladimir Tatlin's The
Monument to the Third International
(a slide of the drawing) and Dan
Flavin's Homage
to Tatlin (slides
of the drawing and neon installation) with locals
and tourists. Tatlin's Monument
was a celebration of the Comintern, which was responsible
for the decisive defeats of the Nationalists' campaign
against the Jiangxi soviet, thereby causing the
Red Army to retreat and eventually embark on the
Long March. Expand discussion to the dream of internationalists
'Utopia' and monument building, in connection with
the new Chinese dream of a 'Socialist Market Economy
with Chinese Characteristic,' and the loss and gain
inherent in this process.
Exhibition, "Utopia,"
New York Public Library, 2001

Object from the exhibition, "Utopia"

Exhibition Panel from "Utopia"
Z
Illumination sign from a bar
in New Orleans

News Clips Concerning the Realization
and/or
Unrealizastion of "Utopia"
Site
Specific Works
Xiao Xiong, China
Performance:
Throughout the three-month Long March project, this
artist will travel with the curator, cameramen and
other artists constituting the core of the Long
March team. His project will engage in a repeated
process of reciprocal exchange with those encountered
along the road. This project will start with the
exchange of a small porcelain statue of Mao, the
likes of which are ubiquitous throughout China.
There will be no limitation on what is given in
exchange with the exchange itself forming the initial
underpinning of not only material but also social
relations, a relation to be continued in a long-linked
process of reciprocity along all 6,000 miles of
the Long March. The devaluation or evaluation of
the object in this process of exchange will be documented
daily in the different geographical and societal
locations.
Song
Dong, China
Performance:
The artist will carry a mobile video projector
to continually project the moving image of a massaging
hand on the audience's face
and body, on both ritualistic and secular spaces.
He has performed this work at the ICA in London
and the Shanghai Biennial.

Song Dong, "In Touch with
My Father," 1997-2000.
Fu
Xinming, China
Sculpture:
Tree-root carvings by Fu Xinming, the local head
of the Public Security Bureau, a local artist.
ĦĦ
Fu Xinming
"Feeling the World of Steel"
Notes
1
In 1934, the defeat of the Jiangxi Soviet by the
National army with the support of its German advisor,
Nazi General Von Falkenhausen, similarly echoed
the role of Captain Charles Gordon of the Royal
Engineers, who aided in the final defeat of the
Taiping movement.
Vincent
Yu-chung Shih, The Taiping Ideology, University
of Washington Press, Seattle, 1967.
2 Trans.
Dick Wilson, Selected Works of Mao,
vol. 1,
Peking, p. 190.
3 Leon
Trotsky (1879-1940), Russian Marxist theorist and
revolutionary. With Lenin in hiding, Trotsky was
the general in charge who successfully directed
the masses of workers and soldiers in the October
revolution, the second part of the Russian Revolution.
He is credited with creating, inspiring, and directing
the Red Army that won the civil war and preserved
the revolution.
Trotsky
was second only to Lenin in the Politburo. After
Lenin died, he lost power in a struggle with Stalin
and was exiled. Trotsky spent the rest of his life
seeking a safe place to compose his critiques of
Stalinist Russia. Living in Turkey, France, Norway,
and finally Mexico, he produced a flood of publications
and searing articles on the major issues of his
day (Stalinism, Nazism, Fascism, and the Spanish
Civil War). A Stalinist agent fatally wounded Trotsky
on August 20, 1940, in Coyoac,
Mexico. He died the following day.
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