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Long
March Space ¨C The Power of the Public Realm
Opening
in the Long March Space, September 18
The
25000 Cultural Transmission Center, Beijing, also known
as The Long March Space, is hosting Long March Space ¨C The
Power of the Public Realm, a long-anticipated exhibition
opening September 18th. One major aim of the Long March
project has been to re-appraise public space, to research
and document public resources and to study and exercise
the connection between display culture and artistic originality.
The project also takes as its aim an exploration of practice
and theory, arts and text and audience and works, all on
the basis of the correlation between arts and life, individuals
and the collective society. The goals of The Long March
project are reflected in their criticism towards the ahistorical
attitudes that characterize contemporary art in China as
represented by elite culture.
The
four artists featured in The Power of the Public Realm are
key participants in the Long March project, where folk visual
culture and elite artistic production come to terms. Master
Li Tianbing, a villager of western Fujian Province, a former
revolutionary base, is a Guinness record-holder and is famous
for taking and developing photos using only natural light.
He took part in the first site of The Long March, held in
Ruijn, themed ¡°Utopia and Chinese Context.¡± Jiang Jiwei,
the ¡°Maxim Mountain Creator,¡± is known for his carvings
of quotations and images into a Quanzhou mountainside. His
work was a major site at the third stop of the Long March
(Roads and Borders/Translation and Transition). In Lijiang
and Lugu Lake, the sixth site of the Long March, the high-spirited
works of retiree Guo Fengyi of Shanxi were featured as part
of a dialogue between Chinese feminist artists and Judy
Chicago. Wang Wenhai, a retired guide of the Yan¡¯an Revolutionary
Museum, is also a participant of the current exhibition.
He has created 1200 sculptures of Chairman Mao over the
last twenty years. Next year, he will be a highlight the
latter part of the Long March, though his collaboration
with the Long March began over a year ago.
The
Long March faces multiple issues. First are the pros and
cons of directly exporting contemporary Chinese art ¡°from
inside-out¡± to international exhibitions and markets. Second
is the way in which Chinese contemporary art superficially
adopts practices of the international art system without
criticism. Western practices are adopted though they may
not be suitable for contemporary Chinese art and may, in
fact, be harmful. Third are the continuous discussions of
post-colonial theory without developing or adding anything
new to the theoretical debate. The fifth issue involves
the tension and gap between the idealism of the newly formed
Dashanzi Art Zone and the surrounding community. The Long
March Space exists as a ground to balance these issues.
Its focus is to contextualize the lives of Chinese artists
through their works. Personal space, individualism and social
environment are an inseparable part of the lives of the
four folk artists participating in the current exhibition.
They challenge our conception of what defines an ¡°artist.¡±
The
discourse generated by the historical Long March and the
visual representation of folk life following the revolution
demonstrated that elite art and folk art could co-exist
and bond in an interactive and dynamic way. The success
of this time period proved to us that the tension we are
experiencing between art and society and the anxiety of
the Chinese art community towards the West in recent times
is not necessary when facing the conflict between the traditional
and modern. Hence, as we bring art to the public realm,
we also bring ¡°folk-art¡± and ¡°non-art¡± into our space. We
hope that the public¡¯s adoption of contemporary artistic
language and the representation of their life and art from
a contemporary perspective can create a dialogue focusing
on ¡°what is art and what is contemporary.¡±
Curator:
Lu Jie, Qiu Zhijie
Opening:
September 18, 2003, 16:15
Dates:
September 18 - November 20, 2003
Address:
the 25000 Cultural Transmission Center, Beijing, 4 Jiuxianqiao
Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing
Postal
address: the 25000 Cultural Transmission Center, Postal
Box No 554, Beijing, 100015
Tel
64387107
Email:
longmarch2003@vip.sina.com
website:
www.longmarchfoundation.org
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