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Blooming in the Shadows: Unofficial Chinese Art, 1974–1985
暗影下绽放的花朵:中国的在野艺术,1974—1985

September 15 – December 11, 2011

Contemporary Chinese art has taken the global art world by storm in the last decade through widely heralded museum exhibitions, well-read publications, and heavily attended art auctions. Even with all the attention, few exhibitions have asked the question of how— against the background of thirty-five years of Socialist Realism—this internationally-oriented artwork suddenly appeared and why it captured the attention of the international art market. This exhibition introduced the work of three unofficial Chinese art groups: the No Names, the Stars, and the Grass Society—all of which arose at the end of the Cultural Revolution and helped launch the avant-garde movement in China. The artists pursued creatively diverse paths to personal artistic freedom under the political circumstances of the time, producing works in the critical decade after the end of the Cultural Revolution leading up the Communist party’s 1985 decision to allow modern artistic practices.

This exhibition, related programming, and catalogue have been made possible, in part, by the generous support of Carolyn Hsu-Balcer and René Balcer; Edward A. Studzinski; and China Institute Friends of the Gallery.

Curated by Kuiyi Shen and Julia F. Andrews

Organized by China Institute Gallery. Exhibition directed by Willow Weilan Hai.

Exhibition Catalogue

Authors: Kuiyi Shen and Julia F. Andrews

In the last decade, contemporary Chinese art has taken the art world by storm through heralded museum exhibitions, well-read publications, and heavily attended art auctions. However, despite all this attention, few exhibitions have asked the question of how—against the background of thirty-five years of Socialist Realism—this internationally-oriented artwork appeared and why it captured the attention of the international art market. Blooming in the Shadows: Unofficial Chinese Art, 1974-1985 will introduce the work of three unofficial Chinese art groups who worked in this vein: the Wuming (No Names), the Xingxing (Stars), and the Caocao (Grass Society)—all of which arose following the end of the Cultural Revolution and helped launch the avant-garde movement in China. These artists pursued creatively diverse paths to personal artistic freedom under the harsh political circumstances of the time. This exhibition catalogue will examine work produced by these three significant groups of young artists in the critical decade after the end of the Cultural Revolution leading up to the Communist party’s 1985 decision to allow modern artistic practices.

Exhibition catalog, 2011. Paperback, 137 pages: ill.
ISBN: 978-0-9774054-7-3

Media Coverage

  • Martin Barnes Lorber, “Blooming in the Shadows: Unofficial Chinese Art 1974-1985,” Asian Art, September 2011.

    “It is one thing to exhibit and another thing to really explain, a connection that is overlooked sometimes in the rush. This exhibition is not such a thing because…the roots, the underpinnings as it were, of Chinese contemporary art as we know it today are exhibited and finally explained.”

Media Coverage

  • Sing Tao Daily 星岛日报
  • Yishu Magazine 艺术
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