Archive for the ‘News’ Category

Yishu Journal – the November/December 2012 Issue Now Available

Thursday, November 1st, 2012

Editor’s Note:

Yishu 53 presents a number of features that explore the work of artists who live in various parts of the world. Zhou Yan points to the difference between how Torontonian Edward Burtynsky depicts the phenomenon of Three Gorges Dam compared to the way Chinese artists portray it. Mathieu Borysevicz talks about Beijing artist Jiang Zhi’s unexpected entry into the genre of abstract art, but, as it turns out, his work is not so truly abstract. Gilles Guillot proposes that Taipei’s Shyu Ruey-Shiann’s recycling of everyday materials is an extension of his personal life and family history. Beijing artists the Gao Brothers’s remarkable sculpture that pits Jesus Christ against a small army of Maos is the subject of an in-depth conversation in London. Orianna Cacchione reviews New York-based Cai Guo-Qiang’s exhibition in Los Angeles, where he continues a long-standing engagement with the idea of communicating with extraterrestrials. Frank Vigneron argues for making a distinction in Hong Kong painting between artists who have come to be referred to as “Nice Painters” and those who might seem to be affiliated with them but are not.

While Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, and Shenzhen represent the most vital centres for contemporary art in mainland China, Yang Wang offers an overview of the art scene in Xi’an, China’s ancient capital city, and the new opportunities for contemporary art that are establishing themselves as the city expands.

We conclude with three texts about alternatives. Julian Scarff responds to a critique of art institutions by Zhou Yan (not the same Zhou Yan who is represented in this current issue) that was published in Yishu 49 and examines some options that exist for artists in taking a critical stance within Chinese institutions. Edward Sanderson speaks with Zhang Wei and Hu Fang about discovering ways of working within a private gallery that fosters an experience of art that is more than mere consumerism, and Joni Low discusses Vancouver publisher Ho Tam’s 88BOOKS series in the context of artists’ books both within China and abroad.

Keith Wallace

image (top): Gao Brothers, The Execution of Christ, 2009, bronze, steel. Courtesy of the artists.

Photos from Art Toronto, October 26-29, 2012

Friday, October 26th, 2012

As the presenting sponsor of Focus ASIA, Yishu Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art will feature a series of 50 interviews with contemporary Chinese artists who have graced the cover of the publication from 2002 to 2012. Yishu Interviews marks the 10th year anniversary of the Vancouver/Taipei-based arts journal. A selection of these interviews will be launched at Art Toronto 2012 and will be accessible online at yishu-online.com. Yishu Interviews is produced by Shengtian Zheng, Don Li-Leger, Debra Zhou and Lin Li.

Photo 1: Yishu Interview at Focus Asia, Toronto

Photo 2: Curators of Focus Asia: Zheng Shengtian and Katherine Don

Photo 3: Yishu Interview and the journal displayed at Focus Asia, Toronto

On View: October 26-29, 2012

Venue: Art Toronto, Metro Toronto Convention Centre, North Building, Exhibit Hall A & B, 255 Front Street West

Visit: http://www.arttoronto.ca/focusasia/

Art Toronto Presents Focus ASIA 2012, Curated by Yishu Managing Editor Zheng Shengtian and Katherine Don

Friday, October 19th, 2012

Art Toronto is pleased to introduce Focus ASIA, an initiative designed to introduce collectors to the dynamic contemporary art practice of the world’s largest continent. Focus ASIA is an invitational section of 13 contemporary galleries from 7 countries as well as a related curated project by the South Asian Visual Arts Centre (SAVAC) and an engaging program of panel discussions and keynote presentations by leading art professionals from the international art community. This year’s feature project, Beyond Geography, is a thought-provoking exhibition of video work and installations that asks: What kind of art do audiences expect to be produced by a diverse group of artists who happen to have lived in Asia or are of Asian descent? When looking at specific materials used by these artists, is one more or less inclined to support or change our perceptions of ‘Asia’?

Curated by Shengtian Zheng and Katherine Don, the Focus ASIA highlight exhibition Beyond Geography presents mixed media and video installations, including The Village and Elsewhere series by Araya Rasdjarmrearnsook, Writing in the Rain by FX Harsono, Cheng Zhang De Fan Nao by Rutherford Chang, One by One by Kan Xuan, War of Java, Do You Remember? by Jompet Kuswidananto, Ons Aller Belang by Tromarama, Beyond Geography by Li Ran, the monumental work on paper Untitled 2008-2011(Map of the Land of Feeling) by Rirkrit Tiravanija, engraved Surfboard series by Tomas Vu, Anonymity lightbox series by Poklong Anading, the book of yellow by Sarindar Dhaliwal, Cloudscape fiber sculptures by Xiaojing Yan and Aaron Taylor Kuffner’s fully robotic Indonesian drum orchestra, The Gamelatron.

As the presenting sponsor of Focus ASIA, Yishu Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art will feature a series of 50 interviews with contemporary Chinese artists who have graced the cover of the publication from 2002 to 2012. Yishu Interviews marks the 10th year anniversary of the Vancouver/Taipei-based arts journal. A selection of these interviews will be launched at Art Toronto 2012 and will be accessible online at yishu-online.com. Yishu Interviews is produced by Shengtian Zheng, Don Li-Leger, Debra Zhou and Lin Li.

On View: October 26-29, 2012

Venue: Art Toronto, Metro Toronto Convention Centre, North Building, Exhibit Hall A & B, 255 Front Street West

For more info, visit: http://www.arttoronto.ca/focusasia/

Photo from Frieze London! (October 11-14, 2012)

Monday, October 15th, 2012

Yishu was delighted to see our readers at the 2012 edition of Frieze London. This was our first time participating in this fair. Thank you all for your support!

About Frieze London:

Celebrating its tenth edition, Frieze London presents over 170 of the most interesting galleries working today from Berlin to New York and London to Tokyo.

In addition to being able to see and buy art by over 1,000 of the world’s leading artists, visitors can experience Frieze Projects, the fair’s unique and critically acclaimed programme of artist commissions and Frieze Talks, a prestigious programme of debates, panel discussions and keynote lectures.

Frieze London is designed by architects Carmody Groarke and housed in a bespoke structure in Regent’s Park. Located in the heart of London, it is within easy walking distance of the city’s West End.

On View: October 11 – 14, 2012

Venue: Regent’s Park, London, UK

Yishu Book Launch at the Institutions by Artists Conference, October 13th, 1pm

Thursday, October 11th, 2012

Yishu is pleased to present our special issue Artist Initiatives in Asia during the Institutions by Artists Conference in Vancouver. The book launch will take place at Simon Fraser University Woodland’s Print Centre on October 13th, at 1pm. Guest-editor Biljana Ciric and editors Keith Wallace and Kate Steinmann will be there to present this special issue. Hope to see you there!

Date: October 13th, 1pm

Venue: Goldcorp Centre for the Arts lobby, SFU Woodward’s Print Centre, 149 West Hastings Vancouver, Canada

About Institutions by Artists Conference: Print Centre

During its upcoming Institutions by Artists conference, Fillip will present a series of parallel events in the lobby of SFU Woodward’s that investigate the material culture produced by the institutional practices of artists. The Print Centre will feature talks, launches, and screenings by conference presenters and attendees. These events are free and open to the public—everyone is welcome.

The programme will be presented alongside a temporary bookstore organized in collaboration with Motto Books, Berlin.

Schedule

Oct. 12, 1 pm

Launch: Donato Mancini

Resources, a print series commissioned by Malaspina Printmakers in conjunction with the Institutions by Artists conference

Oct. 12, 5 pm

Talk: Sean Dockray

“AAAAARG! Five Failures”

Oct. 12, 6 pm

Talk: Charlotte Cheetham

“Curating Graphic Design”

Oct. 13, 1 pm

Launch: Yishu magazine

Special issue on “Institution for the Future” with guest-editor Biljana Ciric and editors Keith Wallace and Kate Steinmann

Oct. 13, 5 pm

Free Screening: Crass: There Is No Authority but Yourself

A document of the radical politics and work of the anarchist punk band Crass and the pacifist commune Dial House, founded by its members in 1967 (In the Cinema, 2nd floor)

Oct. 13, 6 pm

Talk: “A Story of the Museum of American Art” (Berlin)

A Museum technician outlines the trajectory of an educational institution dedicated to assembling, preserving, and exhibiting memories—primarily those of the prewar MoMA.

Oct. 14, 1 pm

Launch: This Book is a Classroom

Passenger Books with former Bauhaus student Otti Berger (embodied by T’ai Smith) introducing her Bindungslehre, or textile pedagogy

Commission: Slide Shows

As part of the Print Centre, Fillip presents Slide Shows, a specially commissioned project by French curator Charlotte Cheetham. Taking the form of an ongoing series of video presentations by publishers, designers, and artists, Slide Shows offers one possible cross section of a newly emergent landscape of contemporary art publishing. The project includes contributions by AND Publishing, An Endless Supply, Michalis Pichler, Elias Redstone, James Langdon, and David Senior, among others.

For more info, please visit: http://arcpost.ca/conference

Photos from the book launch in Shanghai: Chinese Arts Centre’s new book Institution for the Future and Yishu’s special issue on Artist Initiatives in Asia

Thursday, October 11th, 2012

Photos taken from the book launch in Shanghai: Chinese Arts Centre’s new book Institution for the Future and Yishu‘s special issue on Artist Initiatives in Asia. We were honoured to have invited Biljana Ciric, Marko Daniel, Liu Ding and Zheng Shengtian as our speakers. It was a great turnout, and thank you all for your support!

Yishu to Participate at Frieze London, October 11-14, 2012

Thursday, October 4th, 2012

Yishu is pleased to announce its participation in the 2012 edition of Frieze London. Our booth is located at M8. Hope to see you there!

About the Fair:

Celebrating its tenth edition, Frieze London presents over 170 of the most interesting galleries working today from Berlin to New York and London to Tokyo.

In addition to being able to see and buy art by over 1,000 of the world’s leading artists, visitors can experience Frieze Projects, the fair’s unique and critically acclaimed programme of artist commissions and Frieze Talks, a prestigious programme of debates, panel discussions and keynote lectures.

Frieze London is designed by architects Carmody Groarke and housed in a bespoke structure in Regent’s Park. Located in the heart of London, it is within easy walking distance of the city’s West End.

On View: October 11 – 14, 2012

Venue: Regent’s Park, London, UK

Opening Hours

Thursday 11 October 12 – 7pm

Friday 12 October 12 – 7pm

Saturday 13 October 12 – 7pm

Sunday 14 October 12 – 6pm

Entry for concessions is from 1pm onwards.

Timed entry for groups from 1pm.

Last entry to the fair is one hour before closing.

Visit: http://friezelondon.com/

Yishu to Participate in the First Annual Vancouver Art/Book Fair, Oct. 5th-7th, 2012

Monday, October 1st, 2012

Yishu is pleased to participate in the first annual Vancouver Art/Book Fair on October 5th-7th, 2012.

About the Fair:

Project Space and presenting partner Fillip host the first annual Vancouver Art/Book Fair. Drawing from publishers local and international, VA/BF showcases emerging practices and contemporary dialogues in publication through a series of talks, book launches, readings and more, as well as more than seventy publishers of books, magazines, zines and printed ephemera.

VA/BF arose in response to the lack of international art book fairs in Canada and on the West Coast, as well as in acknowledgment of the rich history and current energy in artist publishing in Vancouver and Canada.

VA/BF is an extension of Project Space’s mission to act as a platform for engagement with and critical exploration of publication. Situated at an intersection of disciplines—namely the visual arts, literary arts and/or critical design—publication presents a unique space of inquiry that is often complemented by interdisciplinary practice, collaboration or co-production. With this in mind, the fair will explore publication in a way that is inclusive of dialogues in the visual and literary arts, as well as graphic design.

Date: October 5th-7th, 2012

For more details on venue, please visit:

http://www.vancouverartbookfair.com/

Book Launch in Shanghai: Chinese Arts Centre’s New Book Institution for the Future and Yishu‘s Special Issue on Artist Initiatives in Asia

Monday, September 10th, 2012

Host: Glamour Bar

Address: 6/F, No.5 The Bund (corner of Guangdong Lu), Shanghai

Date: October 1st 2012 , 18:00

Participants: Zheng Shengtian, Marko Daniel, Biljana Ciric

Price: 75RMB (drinks included)

Event will be conducted in Chinese and English

Institution for the Future is an archive of ideas bringing together reflections by artists, curators, and other cultural workers on what an institution for the future should and needs to look like.

The need to evolve our ways of working has always been necessary. In light of the drastic changes to the structure of the art world over the last decade and the wider socio-political and economic challenges we are facing, the need to reconsider our modes of operating to find alternatives seems more pressing than ever. How might we see beyond the current and develop institutional models that function in an unknown future?

Through pondering what an institution for the future might look like the contributors explore a rich array of questions including what the relationship between an institution and artists should be, the possibilities for institutions and activism, an institution’s frame of reference and how it should connect to local and international contexts, the role of an institution in research and knowledge production, an institution’s relationship to the temporal as well as spatial, and an institution as a way of being.

Book contributions include drawings, critical texts, informal correspondence, found text, hypothetical proposals, interviews and diagrammatic explorations by:

Ade Darmawan (ruangrupa), Alistair Hudson (Grizedale Arts), Dmitry Vilensky (chto delat), Dorothea von Hantelmann, Elaine W. Ho, Gerald Raunig, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Hu Xiangqian, Ho Tzu Nyen, Jens Hoffmann, Joăo Ribas, Jun Yang, Keren Cytter, Liu Ding, Marina Abramović, Michael Lee, Monika Szewczyk, Nikita Cai, Richard Streitmatter-Tran, Roslisham Ismail aka Ise, Sam Bower (Green Museum), Seng Yujin, Third Belgrade, Tino Sehgal, Vandy Rattana and Yoko Ono.

Edited by: Biljana Ciric and Sally Lai

Editorial adviser: Alexandra Hodby

Designed by: Lu Pingyuan and He Yiming

Language: English

Published by: Chinese Art Centre (www.chinese-arts-centre.org)


ISBN: 978-0-9545440-5-8

Distributed by Cornerhouse Publications (www.cornerhouse.org/books)

Supported by: Arts Council England, dia/projects, Ho Chi Minh City

Book launch in Shanghai will be presented in collaboration with the publication of the September/October 2012 issue of Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art with the same title Institution for the Future.

This special issue is guest edited by Biljana Ciric and explores the art systems and artist-initiated projects as they have evolved in mainland China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Signapore, Thailand, and India. Texts contributed by Biljana Ciric, Nikita Yingqian Cai, Patrick D. Flores, Sanjay Ghosh, Nur Hanim Khairudden, Carol Lu, Narawan Pathomvat, Richard Streitmatter-Tran, and Eugene Tan.

Institution for the Future is now a topic more important than ever and this special issue of Yishu provides a perspective from a particular region of the world that has comparatively little infrastructure in place yet is in an opportunistic position to explore and provide new and innovative ideas about the ways that artists can function in society.

While Yishu is a publication devoted to contemporary Chinese art, it is also interested in discussing China in relation to other parts of the world. Most often, that discussion takes place in respect to the West, but, with Institution of the Future, China will be explored in the context of its neighbouring nations.

Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, Volume 11 No. 5 (http://yishu-online.com)

Guest Editor: Biljana Ciric

Designer: Leap Creative, Vancouver

Publisher: ARTCO, Taipei

Language: English

The September/October edition of Yishu shares the same title as the exhibition Institution for the Future, which was presented as part of the Asia Triennial Manchester, 2011, curated by Biljana Ciric and Chinese Art Centre. Institution for the Future showcased artists’ collectives and small, independent, para-institutions from various Asian countries who are actively engaged with their local arts scenes and who attempt to contribute to the development of an arts infrastructure in their regions.

For further information, please email: info@chinese-arts-centre.org or takingthestageover@gmail.com

About the participants:

Zheng Shengtian is a scholar, artist, and independent curator. For more than thirty years, he worked at China Academy of Art in Hangzhou as Professor and Chair of the Oil Painting Department. He was the co-founder of the Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art and currently is the Managing Editor of Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art and a trustee of Vancouver Art Gallery. He has been a member of the Academic Committee for the Shanghai Biennale since 1998 and was a co-curator of the 4th Shanghai Biennale in 2004. He has organized numerous exhibitions, including Shanghai Modern at Villa Stuck, Munich, Art and China’s Revolution at Asia Society Museum, New York in 2009. He is the Senior Curator of Asia for Vancouver Biennale and is a frequent contributor to periodicals and catalogues about contemporary Chinese and Asian art. As an artist, his art work has been showing in China, United States and Canada since 1960s.

Marko Daniel is Convenor of Adult Programmes (Tate Modern and Tate Britain, since January 2011) and was Curator of Public Programmes at Tate Modern from May 2006. He was co-curator of Joan Miró: The Ladder of Escape (Tate Modern, April-September 2011, then Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona and National Gallery of Art, Washington) and curator of a solo-show by Taiwanese artist Chen Chieh-jen at Chinese Arts Centre, Manchester (October-November 2010). He also contributed to the catalogue for Ai Weiwei’s exhibition Sunflower Seeds (Tate Modern, 2010-2011). He is Vice-Chair of the London Consortium, a unique collaboration between the Architectural Association, the Institute of Contemporary Arts, the Science Museum, Birkbeck College and Tate that offers interdisciplinary research programmes (Ph.D. and M.Res.) in the humanities.

Biljana Ciric currently lives and works in Shanghai, China as an independent curator. Previously she has held positions as curator and subsequently the Director of the Curatorial Department at the Shanghai Duolun Museum of Modern Art. Her ongoing project, Migration Addicts, was presented in the Collateral Events of the 52nd Venice Biennale in 2007 and in the Shenzhen/Hong Kong Bi-city Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture in 2008. Other exhibitions include Strategies from Within – Contemporary Art Practices in Vietnam and Cambodia at Ke Center of Contemporary Arts (2008); a major retrospective of Yoko Ono entitled Yoko Ono-Fly, co-curated with Gunnar Kvaran at Ke Center for Contemporary Art and at the Guangdong Museum of Art (2008); Contemporaneity –Contemporary Art of Indonesia presented at Shanghai’s MoCA (2010); and Body as a Museum at Tensta Konsthall in Stockholm (2010).

Ciric was the curator of the public art project, Intrude 366 in 2008 and curated History in the Making: Shanghai 1979-2009, 30 Years Retrospective of Shanghai Contemporary Culture in 2009. She also initiated the one-year project, Taking the Stage OVER, an ongoing investigation of the performative impulse in art in venues throughout Shanghai and Beijing, which focused on works of Bestue Vives, Tino Sehgal, Antti Laitinen, Keren Cytter among others. She was the curator of Institution for the Future as part of the Asia Triennial Manchester, 2011.

Yishu Journal – the September/October 2012 Issue Now Available

Monday, September 3rd, 2012

Editor’s Note

Yishu 52, guest-edited by Shanghai-based curator Biljana Ciric, builds upon issues raised in the exhibition Institution for the Future, which she organized for the Chinese Arts Centre in Manchester, UK, during the Asia Triennial Manchester 2011. This exhibition explored new ways artists in Asia are contributing to the development of an art infrastructure within their respective communities.

The texts in Yishu 52 examine artist-initiated spaces, projects, and collectives in China, Vietnam, the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, and India. Through these examples we learn about different histories, cultural contexts, existing art infrastructures, and how artists are creating innovative institutional models within them. While we were unable to include every country within this region of Asia, the ones we selected have, for the most part, lesser-known histories within the broader international realm, and it is our aim that these texts will contribute to an increased understanding of the past, present, and future of artist initiatives within Asia and to provide a forum for these various nations to see themselves in relationship to each other.

Together, these texts look at opportunities that exist for artists within their particular art infrastructures where museums, galleries, foundations, as well as collectors, curators, critics, and audiences play a fundamental role. In most of Asia, these systems tend to be different from those in the West; their recent art histories have frequently been altered by destabilizing social, economic, or political interventions. Institution for the Future proposes that in many ways artistic practice has been taken out of the hands of artists, who, in order to become successful, too often are compelled to adhere to the protocols and rules of what has evolved into a huge, largely market-driven or politicized art industry, and presents the ways some are strategizing to regain control of their destinies.

We thank Biljana Ciric for proposing this idea to Yishu and also to all the contributors who have brought valuable insights into artist initiatives within these regions of Asia.

Keith Wallace

Image (top): Participants relax in the courtyard before stretching their vocal chords with experimental improvisationists Phil Minton and Audrey Chen for HomeWorkShop No. 13, 2012. Courtesy of HomeShop, Beijing.