Jiangsu huakan

Jiangsu huakan
[Jiangsu Art Monthly, Nanjing, 1974–]
Founded in the early 1970s as a bi-monthly publication aimed at popularizing the totalitarian art canon of the time, Jiangsu huakan became a specialized contemporary art monthly in 1985, a year that saw the emergence of new art expressions facilitated by the relaxed political climate and manifested in a vast range of art practices and critical debates. This nationwide phenomenon known as the 85 New Wave [Art] Movement was actively followed by Jiangsu huakan, which in the July issue of 1985 published a provocative essay by Li Xiaoshan questioning the limitations, and the future, of ‘traditional Chinese painting’ (Zhongguohua). The article stirred a series of heated debates dealing with the innovation/tradition issue that put traditional academic education under scrutiny. In 1989 the abrupt end of the exhibition ‘China Avant-Garde brought about the closure of Zhongguo meishubao [Fine Art in China], a Beijing weekly that provided the theoretical backbone for the exhibition.
After this episode, Jiangsu huakan became the most important continuously published arena for Chinese and Western contemporary art thinking and practices. It played a significant role in the development of New Literati Painting (Xin wenren hua), and includes detailed reports on major national and international events such as the Venice Biennale and Documenta. Although in the late 1990s its style seemed less glamourous than other more recent periodicals with their sharper pitch and clearer-cut graphic images, Jiangsu huakan remains one of the most longstanding publications that have witnessed and encouraged the growth of contemporary Chinese art. In July 2003, it changed its name to Huakan.
Lü, Peng and Yi, Dan (1992). Zhongguo xiandai yishu shi [A History of Modern Art in China]. Changsha: Hunan meishu chubanshe, 114–20.
TANG DI

Encyclopedia of contemporary Chinese culture. . 2011.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • van Dijk, Hans — (Johannes Gerardus Adrianus Wilhelmus Cloeck) b. 1946, Deventer, Netherlands; d. 2002 Art curator Hans van Dijk began his career as an artist studying at the Arnhem Arts Academy and at the Eindhoven Design Academy, where he graduated in 1970. In… …   Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture

  • Li Xiaoshan — b. 1957, Nanjing Art critic A daring art critic mainly preoccupied with the future of Zhongguohua (traditional Chinese painting), Li Xiaoshan’s provocative article, ‘My Opinion about Contemporary Chinese Painting’ (Dangdai zhongguohua zhi wojian …   Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture

  • Hualang — [Art Gallery Magazine, Guangzhou, 1980–] Art journal When launched in the 1980s as a bimonthly by the Lingnan Fine Art Publishing in Guangzhou, Hualang would become one of the three most comprehensive art periodicals in China along with Meishu… …   Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture

  • Meishu sichao — [Trends in Aesthetics] Art journal A bi monthly journal of art criticism established in Wuhan in November 1984 by the Hubei branch of the Chinese Artists’ Association, Meishi sichao was closed down for political reasons in December 1987. Its… …   Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture

  • Liu Zijian — b. 1956, Shashi, Hubei Abstract ink wash painter Ever since his graduation in 1983 from the Department of Chinese Painting at the Hubei Academy of Fine Arts, Liu Zijian has been experimenting with abstract ink painting (see Modern Ink Wash… …   Encyclopedia of Contemporary Chinese Culture

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”