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Site
11, August 24-28, Moxi
Village, Sichuan Province

Bosshardt, The Restraining Hand,
1936


Liu Jing, "My Spiritual
Home," Performance

Liu Wei, "Let's Get Happy
Together," from the event,
Post-Sense Sensibility --Spree, 2001

Shi Qing, "An Apocalypse
to Save the World," CD-Rom, 2001
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History

Bosshardt on the Long March,
1934
Mao
used this Catholic Church as his headquarters when
the Red Army passed by this small village at the
foot of Gongga Mountain. Why did the Red Army repeatedly
use churches and not Buddhist temples, as their
headquarters, their residences and meeting places?
Was the occupation a form of transcendence from
a spectrum of colonization to a space of revolution,
or was it perhaps a metaphor for lost and reclaimed
space through spiritual cleansing?
During
the Long March, a Swiss missionary named R.A.Bosshardt1
was accused of espionage and captured by the Red
Army. After failing to obtain ransom money, the
Red Army sentenced Bosshardt to eighteen months
imprisonment and further, required him to serve
his term as part of the Long March brigade. The
Red Army's revolutionary education' was successful
and over his one year ordeal, Bosshardt became converted
to the ideals of the revolution. Upon the completion
of his term, he was released and given travel expenses
to return to Europe. He later wrote of the similarities
between Communism and Christianity in his book,
The Restraining Hand.

Children in front of the Church

Church congregation holding a
service in rural China

Chinese newspaper's angry response
toward the naming of 120 Chinese Matyrs by the Vatican
Exhibition
We will examine the role and repercussions of
Christianity in China. Local and international artists
will create works in the local Catholic church,
juxtaposing objects, art works and texts that represent
different ideologies to form a dialogue between
the missionary and libertine, and the ensuing acceptance
or resistance by the locals.
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