TEMPORARY BOUNDARY PRESS RELEASE. A survey on China censured videos and photographs. Video section curated by CIFA-China Independent Film Archive

Similar documents
GALERIE PARIS-BEIJING PARIS - BRUSSELS - BEIJING

Solo Show of Photography and Vdeo. From September 20th to November 1st 2014

Three generations of Chinese video art

A View on Chinese Contemporary Art

Discovering China Through Film COMM 301

THE THEME OF SEXUALITY: ZHANG YIMOU S RED SORGHUM AND JU DOU

Shanghai Nan Yang Model High School

fred forest 23 june - 5 august 2017 press release

Kimberly Walker. Special Thanks. Support for this FotoFocus Biennial 2018 exhibition provided by FotoFocus

Nature Awareness Training for Health and Success: The Art of Self Study In. Attunement With Universal Energies

Anthropology 3705 Contemporary Chinese Culture & Society The George Washington University Spring 2016

LOVE AIJING AIJING's ART and Audience Symposium Transcript

Paper 1F: Listening and Understanding in Chinese Foundation Tier. Tuesday 24 May 2016 Morning Time: 35 minutes and 5 minutes reading time

A Peep through a Tube at a Leopard. Zheng Wu. A thesis. submitted in partial fulfillment of the. requirements for the degree of. Master of Fine Arts

Wolfgang Tillmans at Fondation Beyeler, Basel

Michael Zheng. I. Chinese Video Art in the 1980s

AN ELEPHANT SITTING STILL

ANGELS WEAR WHITE. Written and directed by Vivian Qu. 22 Hours Films Present. China min Color

GAGOSIAN GALLERY. Gregory Crewdson

lijinsong 1984 sohu. com

Advanced Unit 3: Understanding, Written Response and Research

JONATHAN D. SPENCE THE SE "027082

The Construction of Graphic Design Aesthetic Elements

Censorship in a Chinese Publishing Context: Catalyst or Curtailment? A Case Study Involving Jung Chang s Wild Swans

How to read the Chinese characters (Mandarin) Lesson 1

SECONDARY WORKSHEET. Living Things

Our People Our Land Our Images

Music is the Remedy. was near the establishment of jazz (Brown 153+). Serving in the United States army during the

THE ART OF CALLIGRAPHY IN MODERN CHINA BY GORDON S. BARRASS DOWNLOAD EBOOK : THE ART OF CALLIGRAPHY IN MODERN CHINA BY GORDON S.

Interview with Ghada Amer

DOWNLOAD OR READ : MAOS LITTLE RED VIDEO 2001 MAOS LITTLE RED VIDEO PDF EBOOK EPUB MOBI

THE GROUND BENEATH MY FEET (Der Boden unter den Füßen) by Marie Kreutzer. SO LONG MY SON (Di jiu tian chang) by WANG Xiaoshuai

Discussion on the Strategies of Nationalized Chinese Piano Education. Hong Deng and Lin Yu

Life Areas Test & Bagua Map

Muller s play of human sorrow

Program of Hanban Culture Show at Bangor, Maine

Shanxi, PRC, China *Corresponding author

GALERIE KASHYA HILDEBRAND

GCE A LEVEL. WJEC Eduqas GCE A LEVEL in FILM STUDIES COMPONENT 2. Experimental Film Teacher Resource GLOBAL FILMMAKING PERSPECTIVES

Document No. D_WP3_3_03 Document Access: Public. Film production Date:

Ambient Propaganda: Attunement, Affect & The Chinese Dream

A Comparison of Literature Classification Schemes in Dewey Decimal Classification and New Classification Scheme for Chinese Libraries

Light Painting Photography Project

AWQ 3M/4M Microplanet & Mandala Photography Project

Fall of the Artist Individual, Rise of the Art Corporation

Product Advertisement: Glamourize Object

A Lovely Land is Ours...

We Need to Talk About Kevin

Examination papers and Examiners reports E040. Victorians. Examination paper

Why Is It Important Today to Show and Look at Images of Destroyed Human Bodies?

SOCIAL & MOBILE MEDIA JOURNALISM

Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro

Dr. Shi Chuan: Curriculum Vitae. Dr. SHI CHUAN

BROADCASTING THE OLYMPIC GAMES

JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro

NUS MUSEUM. Strategies towards the real S. Sudjojono and Contemporary Indonesian Art

Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2016, xiii+372pp., ISBN: Publishing offers us a critical re-examination of what the book is hence, the

Winter 2010 ARTH/EAST 356 Modern & Contemporary Chinese Art

An Interview with Featured Artist Angela Xu

1. Introduction The Differences of Color Words between China and Western. countries Same Object, Different Color Terms...

Entertaining Functions of Verbal Impoliteness in Computer-Mediated Communication Lin-Xia CHEN 1,a,*

City Contemporary Dance Festival exciting contemporary dance productions in Hong Kong A feast of Asian dance creativity in November

Fenwick Gallery Use Policies March 29, 2014

Lights, camera, cut. For more than 60 years, China s Communist

The Naked Truth. Discovery Dance, George Catlin George Catlin s view:

The Belt and Road International Film Exchange and Press Conference of the 2nd Canada China International Film Festival

XU Jin-qiong, JIANG Deng-ke. Modern Chinese Poetry Research Institute, Southwest University, Chongqing, China. Introduction

Challenging Form. Experimental Film & New Media

An Indian Journal FULL PAPER ABSTRACT KEYWORDS. Trade Science Inc.

University of British Columbia Library Rare Books and Special Collections. Finding Aid - Tiananmen Square Collection (RBSC- ARC-1785)

SALLY GALL. looking up

BLIND MASSAGE_presskit_BERLIN.indd 1 05/02/ :47

Officializing the Unofficial: Presenting New Chinese Art to the World

Schedule of Events in Music China & Prolight + Sound Shanghai 2007

AVI 3M Alphabet Photo Project

Classical Chinese Literature in Translation LITR 290

doi http / /dx. doi. org / /issn x

Healthy Heritage: MK Underground

aster of Suspense: Alfred Hitchcock

The View from Perlov By: Uri Klein Taken from Haaretz Magazine, Dec

5 th Grade. Book Report/Literature Response Ideas Packet

The Comparison of Chinese and English Idioms ----from the Perspective of Ethics You Wang 1,2

Personal Intervention

This document is downloaded from DR-NTU, Nanyang Technological University Library, Singapore.

Cherry announced that she has nominated Jane Thomas for the Rotary Red Rose Award for her continued contributions to the Library and this community.

RESEARCH OF FRAME SYNCHRONIZATION TECHNOLOGY BASED ON PERFECT PUNCTURED BINARY SEQUENCE PAIRS

Metonymy Research in Cognitive Linguistics. LUO Rui-feng

Social Justice Collage Project

Advanced Unit 3: Understanding, Written Response and Research

The Picture and the Story IATEFL 2014

Coming Home. A film by Zhang Yimou. Official Selection Cannes Film Festival 2014 Toronto International Film Festival mins Rated PG-13

*** But in recent controversies, the protesters seem to be winning.

The Simpsons and American Society: Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of the Perfect Donut

Exuberant overkill... more than 1,000 concerts in a single eleven-hour day. - New York Magazine

The onslaught of ziad AnTAr

Resisting the Realism Complex : Challenging the Aesthetic and Technical Range of Digital Production in Taiwanese Documentary Filmmaking

PAINTING CINEMAPH C OT O OGR M APHY IDIGITALCILLUSTRASTIONAMATEUR

WHAT DO WE LEARN ABOUT MAO FROM JIANG QING BIOGRAPHIES? LOOKING AT JIANG QING BIOGRAPHIES FROM A META-BIOGRAPHICAL AND MYHTO-BIOGRAPHICAL PERSPECTIVE

CONTENTS. part 1: premises and inspirations. Acknowledgments

Women Artists. Suggested Response. THE ECONOMIES OF BEING: A Response to Barbara Kruger s I Shop therefore I am

Transcription:

TEMPORARY BOUNDARY A survey on China censured videos and photographs Video section curated by CIFA-China Independent Film Archive PRESS RELEASE GALERIE PARIS-BEIJING 62, rue de Turbigo 75003 Paris M Arts et Métiers / Temple TEL: +33 (0)1 42 74 32 36 paris@galerieparisbeijing.com www.galerieparisbeijing.com

TEMPORARY BOUNDARY GROUP SHOW : A survey on China censured videos and photographs Video section curated by CIFA-China Independent Film Archive Chi Peng, Gao Brothers, Liu Bolin, Mo Yi, Ren Hang, Zhang Dali, Liu Wei, Wu Junyong, Ma Yong Feng, Huang Xiang, Jin Shan, Chen Shaoxiong, Jiang Zhi, Xu Yong 07.11-19.12.2015 Opening 07.11 from 6 to 9 pm Tuesday-Saturday 11am-7pm Temporary Boundary is a curatorial project presented in two parts, revealing a selection of contemporary Chinese photographs and artist s videos that have been censured in their own country. Galerie Paris-Beijing is very proud to host the curator of CIFA-China Independent Film Archive for the video part of the exhibition. Among the photographic works, the selection of which was conceived by Romain Degoul, the gallery s founder, we find works by the Gao Brothers: since the 1980s, the two brothers have been practicing political satire through their pieces, which has brought them under close surveillance. Two guards are regularly posted at the entrance of their studio. The photograph Now-ing, by Chi Peng was censured right in the middle of the SH Contemporary fair in Shanghai, where the gallerist initially had to cover the work with a sheet before removing it only to sell it to the censor s friend, who was amused by the whole polemic! Such are the anecdotes that we recount through the exhibition. Gao Brothers, The interview, 2007 Chi Peng, Now-ing, censured during the SH Contemporary in 2012

With Memories of 1989, Mo Yi a direct witness to the events in Tiananmen Square has his own way of documenting an event that is taboo in China. For all these years, his photographs have remained hidden in a safe place. With his other series of self-portraits, Prisoner (1997), Mo Yi photographs himself from all sides, like a mug shot. Newspaper clippings tell of Tiananmen. These iconic images are typical examples of self-censorship. Here, sets chosen by Liu Bolin to create his photo-performances are strongly marked by political symbolism, such as propaganda slogans or the national flag, the use of which is absolutely forbidden in China. Mo Yi, Prisoner, 1997 Liu Bolin, Hide in the City n 43, 2007 On June Fourth 1989, Xu Yong documented with his film camera the Tiananmen square protests in Beijing. The photograph had kept hidden this trove of snapshots for a long time. After more then two decades, he digitally scanned his negatives and today he presents them directly as negative images. The purpose is to revisit this important historic event and to reflect on its continued impact. As he expressed himself: «On the attempt to cover-up and induce amnesia on an historic event, negatives have more direct impact as evidence than normal photographs or digital media». Xu Yong borrows the negative image photographic plates to remind us that the Tiananmen massacre is still forbidden from public discourse by the Chinese government, and the commemoration of this unbearable reality is even further proscribed. But even more than that, they raise questions about people s collective memories of the events of June 4th, 1989. In the works, the real description of history seems constrained by the dark imagery of the negatives, yet it achieves unfamiliar sensations as the eyes of the spectator are continuously seeking. Xu Yong, NEGATIVES, 1989 Xu Yong, NEGATIVES, 1989

Second History, an investigation of Maoist propaganda photographs undertaken by Zhang Dali over a period of years, confronts original photographs with newspapers and documents from the period, all in one composition. The manipulations done at the time to elevate the image of The Great Helmsman are an amusing nod to Photoshop! Zhang Dali, Second History, n 109, 2005 The theme of sexuality is recurrent in the work of Ren Hang (1987): naked bodies interlaced, women smoking alone on a city rooftop or naked in a tree, but also scenes of kisses and embraces, always infused with a great poetry. They are reminiscent of Nan Goldin, but less subversive, as Ren Hang doesn t wish to be explicit, nor to openly show his sexuality his photographs are above all about opening up a space of freedom. People have spat on his works, and he has had to cancel exhibitions in the past due to censorship. In his work, we can read the deep malaise of Chinese youth, but also, ultimately, their pleasure at being together, and the strength of the ties that bind them and the mutual confidence that they have for each other. Even today, the naked bodies and the sexual scenes in the work of this young Beijing artist challenge Chinese morals. Ren Hang, 2012_5 Ren Hang, 2014_19

The animations of Wu Junyong have the same destabilizing effect as Aesop s fables and Grimm s fairy tales: peopled by kings, buffoons and animals, the videos use the codes of a marionette puppet master, and of performance, to critique society s cupidity and pride. Almost gothic in their aesthetic, they are marked by a sombre spirit that seems timeless, drawing from Chinese and Western mythology to expose the folly of authority. In Wu s work, where drawing allows for a great freedom, a strange feeling of ambiguity pervades as a result of the fact that such violent images can seem so attractive to us. In A Day to Remember, Liu Wei questions students as they leave Beijing University on 4 June 2005, the day of the 16th anniversary of the repression of Tiananmen. He asks them all the same question: Do you know what today s date is? Even if someone dares to respond correctly, the majority of the passers-by turn their heads away, while others remain silent when faced with the camera, or say that they have no idea: I don t know, I don t want to answer, or turn off the camera are the most common responses. Liu Wei films the reactions of passers-by to what seems to be a very simple question, and in so doing, he convincingly demonstrates that the revolt is still a taboo subject in China. The blood that flowed at that time has been replaced by silence. Many young people are not aware that for years, it was forbidden to discuss the subject, and that the revolt was covered up by the authorities. This is his way of breaking the silence and showing the denial. Wu Junyong, Opera, video animation, 2007 Liu Wei, A day to remember, vidéo still, 2005

An artist with a strong sense of social engagement, Ma Yong Feng created Forget Art in 2009, a social mobilization organization that operates according to a series of alternative micro-resistance tactics through different forms of artistic expression and the use of social networks. Through his work, The Swirl, the artist bears witness to the difficulty of practicing his art in a post-totalitarian society, where control is exercised as totally as it is invisibly. This fifteen-minute video is astonishing as much for its optical composition as for its duration. The gaze is immediately directed towards the open drum of a washing machine. Six goldfish are tormented and abused inside. The futility of the torment and the powerlessness of the situation can be read as a metaphor of torture. It can equally be perceived as a social critique and a cynical observation of the artist s existence. Ma Yong Feng, The swirl, video, 2002 In 2011, Huang Xiang was placed in criminal detention for a month following his performance of Jasmine Flower. After he was released, his pursuit of artistic productions and exhibitions in China was restricted. Today, Huang Xiang is mainly involved in independent cinema. He produced and directed his first films, Roast Chicken and Yumen. The latter recently received the grand prize at the Taiwan International Documentary Festival. His performance Demolition reveals yet again the artist s will to express himself in the face of the powers that be. The performance was filmed in the evening: a man undresses and holds himself upright on a stone floor. Huang changes into a nurse s uniform. Equipped with various surgical utensils, he engraves the word Demolition in Chinese on the torso of the man. A photo of the final result is taken and revealed the same night in a shop window. Immediately, the authorities arrive and try to confiscate the print. Huang Xiang, Demolition, video performance, 2011

Chen Shaoxiong was a founding member of the Big Tail Elephant, a group of conceptual artists active in Guangzhou in the 1990s. Today, he works both individually and in collaboration as a member of an Asian artists collective called Xijing Men, as well as in another Chinese artists collective, Project without space. His art spans different media, including painting, photography, collage and conceptual art. For Ink History Chen created more than 150 pen and ink drawings of historical photos of major events in China from 1909 to 2009. Following this, he filmed the drawings in a three-minute video that retraces the story of Modern China, with a ticking clock in the background. For his surveillance videos, Jin Shan recruited two volunteers to be directed in a film that borders on the sadistic: a meditation on the ways that we relinquish certain freedoms. The artist creates absurd and unexpected scenarios that reveal man s desire to be controlled. Through them, he subtly explores the definition of liberty: the impact of his images violence at once visual and psychological suggests a profound feeling of awkwardness and discomfort that embody the multiple facets of the notion of liberty. Chen Shaoxiong, Ink History, video, 2008-2010 Jiang Zhi, Onward!Onward!Onward!, vidéo still, 2006 Jin Shan, Why Freedom?, vidéos, 2014 Jiang Zhi is one of China s most important video artists. The winner of the Chinese Contemporary Art Association s Chinese Contemporary Art Award in 2000, he comments on various aspects of the turbulent society of modern China, from the move away from individual existence to the frantic rhythm of our social lives. The video installation Onward! Onward! Onward! (2006) represents the Chinese leaders Mao Zedong, Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin running, one after the other. Their endless motion represents faith in progress, as summed up by the popular slogan: As long as we keep running, we will always be advancing, while highlighting that the notion of destiny is profoundly rooted in this society.

Last but not least, the exhibition shows the documentary AI WEIWEI: NEVER SORRY by Alison Klayman. This young American director has filmed the daily struggle and related the inside story of the most emblematic figure of the dissidence in China. Ai Weiwei is known the world over for his critical position and his activism that in our digital age inspire global audiences and blur the boundaries of art and politics. For her first film, Alison Klayman gained unprecedented access to Ai Weiwei while working as a journalist in China. Her detailed portrait provides a nuanced exploration of contemporary China and one of its most compelling public figures. AI WEIWEI : NEVER SORRY A film directed by Alison Klayman 91 00 2012

High defintition images are available on demand. For each image used, please mention the copyright below: artist name / courtesy Galerie Paris-Beijing CONTACTS paris@galerieparisbeijing.com +33 (0)1 42 74 32 36 PRESS INQUIRIES Silvia Mattei silvia@galerieparisbeijing.com CURRENTLY AT THE GALLERY ALEX SETON The Journey 10.09-24.10.2015 UPCOMING EVENTS PARIS - PHOTO 12.11-15.11.15 Grand Palais BOOTH D2 Liu Bolin Wang Bing Zhang Kechun FONDATION RICARD BOOTH VISION - The new campaign by Li Wei GALERIE PARIS-BEIJING 62, rue de Turbigo - 75003 Paris TEL: +33 (0)1 42 74 32 36 / paris@galerieparisbeijing.com / www.galerieparisbeijing.com