black musing sheep 在上[shag-Hai]海

singaporean residing in shaghai. smoke da qian men.. puff puff

逝者如斯
网志文件夹
· 所有网志 (281)
· China News (33)
· Singapore News (5)
· Malaysia News (3)
· World News (7)
· History (3)
· Archaeology (9)
· Culture and Society (3)
· Cultural Heritage (19)
· Art (10)
· photography (22)
· Blogs Of Note (4)
· reviews (61)
· travel (3)
· 生活 (22)
· 情感 (3)
· 瞬间 (1)
· 垃圾 (2)
· bitching (43)
· f.u.s.s.a (0)
· words (11)
· 未分类 (17)
搜索本站
友情链接
· 我的歪酷 非非共享界
· 中国的另一端
· 东南西北
· Virtual China
· TIME China
· Telegraph China
· shanghaiist
· imagethief
· global.voicesonline
· danwei
· china.trends
· China Rises
· China Challenges
· Beijing Newspeak
· china view
· rambling.librarian
· museumblogs
· archaeoseek
· s.e.a.archaeology
· become.a.lib
· libraryola
· lib.planet
· muse.roundtable
· sg.cool
· miel photonski
· edgar su
· Eolo Perfido
· photo.verb
· Brand Ann Keneally
· Natalie Behring
· Philip Lee Harvey
· quarlo
· scott stulberg
· Shinmiao - ME!
· Daily Photo Evolution
· s.e.r
· MUSING BULL
· m.u.g.m.a.o
· urban musings
· l.a.n.i.s 兰
· zheng muya
· 陈菜妹
· dirty dancing diva
· talking cock
· m.e.l
· ah heng
· melvin tan
· where [apples] fall
·
·
· Make Money Online
·
·
·
·
·
·
·
· bobjots
· acidtripping
· Rice Bowl Journal

订阅 RSS

0149663

歪酷博客

本模版系 歪酷博客YuMi,猫粟米 授权使用


« 上一篇: Weird buns that we put in our stomarchs... 下一篇: Code of Ethics: Museum Management »
Miel @ 2007-07-14 13:52



In Beijing, one cannot miss going to Great Wall of China, The Tian An Men Square, the forbidden city, the summer palace. In the other part of Beijing, the little known area in which Chinese Contemporary Art thrive and a must to visit for art lovers is the 798 factory. Many post cultural revolution Chinese artists host their art works there. However, even though so, many artists reknown internationally still remain ambigous to the locals. Such is the case for Zhang Jianhua, whose sculpture works are disturbing and profound, especially those he made: life size sculptures of Chinese coal miners

His life works depicts depict miners sitting on the ground in their black rubber boots wearing looks of sheer fatigue. Some stare blankly into the distance or prop up their heads with both hands, their faces fixed in nameless agony. Although seeing it, one might not feel any connection to it without before hand understanding  the social issues in China, in which coal miners die in the thousand annually due to the hazardous working environment and poor safety issues. Little do the locals look upon the sculptures with interests, and silently, it also symbolizes the problems coal miners face in modern China, making them  silent victims to disasters little known to people. Or simply, not many care about them.

The works of Zhang, now in his mid thirties, received many critical praises from the art industry. However, locally, no Chinese museum or established gallery  is willing to take in his display of the coal miners entirety, even though he insists, due to the controversy and troubles it might bring from the local authorities. This can be seen clearly when his works was exhibited in 798 factory during April this year, but demanded by the censors to remove the six dead coal mine workers out of the show. They just do not wish to see it somehow.

If you look at it in a picture most Chinese in this era want to depict a progressive China, full of smiles and great improvements. No one like to look at the ugly side being depicted. Everything is good and merry, the air is tinged and filled with love songs. There is nothing "wrong" with China. There is no bubble reality at all.

Officially, 4,794 coal miners died in work-related accidents in China last year - more than 13 every day, on average, though many believe the official figures understate the real toll. But Zhang's temerity in representing the victims has won his work what might be called a soft ban.

And Zhang is not aiming to criticize the authorities. He would just like to see that from his works, he can change and affect the society, gaining awareness from the public, in which changes can happen to make his belove country more open and transparents about making changes possible, not with empty promises and propaganda. Everyone should know what is going on in the country. The thing is, a large majority do know, but they choose to leap into a safety zone of "i fuck care as long nothing disturb me" attitude.

Personally, I think people outside of China are more interested with the Chinese Contemporary Artists than the locals. If these artists did not gain International attention when they exhibited their works overseas, pressures forced upon China internationally, a lucrative art market in which China wants to put his paws upon, and also because of the WTO few years back, the voice of the artists locally will still remain unclear throughout the country.

more about the artist, extract

The artist's first taste of successful shock realism came with another series of sculptures four years ago in which he depicted the lives of peasants from his native Henan Province. The 12 figures in that series included an elderly woman sitting alone, threadbare migrant workers and rural schoolteachers.

The work drew critical praise when it was introduced at a gallery in Beijing. But when the show began touring other venues in the capital that year, displayed on the grounds of two middle-class housing developments and at China Agricultural University, it drew strong protests, with residents and students attacking it as vulgar, striking the artist and knocking over some of the figures.

The university exhibition had to be canceled after only two hours.

"These were beggars," said one commentator in a school newspaper. "It's sick." Another complained that "rural areas have progress, too, why not show that?"

Zhang's choice of topics is not the only thing that sets him apart from many contemporaries. He said that to prepare for his miner series, he made numerous trips to the coal country in Shanxi and Henan provinces, living with miners for weeks at a time, soaking up their hard-knocks culture while simultaneously observing the lives of the illegal mine owners, with their flashy, sudden wealth.

The artist grew particularly animated as he described the scenes of lavish weddings organized for the daughters of coal mine owners in Datong, one of China's most famous mining towns, of motorcades of stretched Cadillacs and Hummers and Mercedes-Benzes, festively honking their horns. "This is the kind of ostentation they want," he said. "Yet underneath the wheels are piles of white bones and pools of fresh blood."

For his next project, clearly another effort at unveiling a ubiquitous but officially invisible social problem, Zhang said he planned to portray the country's large numbers of prostitutes. "Not the prostitutes of the rich, but the ordinary, working-class prostitutes, who live in very difficult conditions."


曾经的这一天...



评论 / 个人网页 / 扔小纸条
* 昵称

已经注册过? 请登录

新用户请先注册 以便能显示头像及追踪评论回复

Email
网址
* 评论
表情
 


 

分类小组论坛
杂谈 , 娱乐、八卦 , 文学、艺术 , 体育 , 旅游、同城 , 象牙塔 , 情感 , 时尚、生活 , 星座 , 科技

请注意遵守中华人民共和国法律法规, 如威胁到本站生存, 将依法向有关部门报告, 同时本站的相关记录可能成为对您不利的证据.

相关法律法规
全国人大常委会关于维护互联网安全的决定
中华人民共和国计算机信息系统安全保护条例
中华人民共和国计算机信息网络国际联网管理暂行规定
计算机信息网络国际联网安全保护管理办法
计算机信息系统国际联网保密管理规定