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Chinese contemporary art comes out of shadow
By Zhan Yan
Yue Minjun enjoys laughing at the world. He paints himself on canvas: a
group of Yue's laughing during military exercises, laughing while flying
on backs of geese and laughing at historic world events.
The 44-year-old Yue has a reason to laugh in the real world now. His
painting, "The Pope" - a giggling Yue dressed as a Pope - sold for 2. 14
million pounds, or over 30 million yuan, at Sotheby's London auction in
June 2007, setting a new record for Chinese contemporary art piece. The
last record holder before was Liu Xiaodong, whose painting "The New
Migrants of the Three Gorges" sold for 22 million yuan at Beijing Poly
International Auction in November 2006.
Chinese contemporary art has taken off in the international art world.
Yue is not the only Chinese avant-garde artist selling at international
auctions; others include Zhang Xiaogang, Fang Lijun, Liu Xiaodong and
Yang Shaobin. The rise of Chinese contemporary art took many by
surprise. Just 20 years ago, today's big-name artists were described by
their neighbors as "mang liu", or jobless loafers, moving from their
hometowns to illegally live in big cities like Beijing.
To escape their neighbors' distrustful eyes, during the early 1990s many
artists moved to a village near the Yuanmingyuan (the Old Summer Palace)
in northern suburban Beijing, where the rents were lower and they could
live as a group. "We were a headache for local police, who thought we
were troublemakers. They just didn't want us to live there (the
Yuanmingyuan), but had no reason to get rid of us so they kept coming to
our homes. It was hard to concentrate on painting," recalls Yue in his
spacious studio in Songzhuang Township.
Like Yue, many artists are now living in Songzhuang after being driven
out of the Yuanmingyuan area in the early 1990s. In fact, about 1,500
artists from all over the country have moved to Songzhuang since 1994,
taking the town as their home. The town in Tongzhou district in the
eastern suburbs of Beijing has become a leading base for Chinese
contemporary art. "You can't imagine how life has changed," says Yang
Wei, a leading art critic who came to public attention with his
sarcastic paintings of the People's Bank of China. "If our electricity
meter is broken, the local authority immediately sends people to repair
it. In the past, they would have tried to drive us away."
Chinese contemporary art has blossomed since 1979 after Chinas reform
and opening-up drive. It boomed from long years of isolation from the
international contemporary art scene, which sprang up after 1945. Few
aspects of modern Chinese life better characterize the nation's
continental drift away from its collective past to a more
individualistic future.
"The country's management mode has changed. During the planned economy
era, it was the elite powers who decided what the people should do and
say," Yue recalls. "The people should all make steel because the country
needed steel or should weave cloth because of a shortage of cloth.
Society was run from top to bottom."
"Now a lot special creation starts from a basic individual. The creation
grows and then gets accepted by the mainstream and changes the people's
thinking just like Chinese contemporary art's trajectory." Contemporary
art has transformed the country's physical landscape too. It has formed
several cultural landmarks out of dilapidated plants or reclusive
villages in Beijing such as the 798 Plant, Jiuchang (Brewer Plant),
Fangcaodi (Fresh Grassland), Suojiacun Village and Songzhuang Township.
—China Features |