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"Jason C. Kuo's in-depth study of the paintings of Gao Xingjian
significantly enriches our understanding of a major cultural
polymath. This lavishly illustrated book enables us to make
important connections between painting and writing, a type of
synthesis often downplayed by western post-Enlightenment tendencies
toward cultural specialization but very much at the heart of the
Chinese literati tradition." Paul Gladston (University of
Nottingham), principal editor of the Journal of Contemporary
Chinese Art and author of Contemporary Chinese Art: A Critical
History. "In The Inner Landscape: The Paintings of Gao Xingjian,
Jason C. Kuo offers his readers a multifaceted lens through which
to frame an engagement with the remarkable pictorial, filmic, and
literary art of the Chinese writer and 2000 Nobel laureate in
literature, Gao Xingjian. A central theme in his oeuvre is
reflection on his life as a writer in self-exile in France, a life
at once burdened with the memory of his homeland and yet
artistically liberating. Kuo illuminates our understanding of the
meaning and significance of his art by situating it within a
critical discussion of the contemporary context of global
modernity, a context that challenges our notions of national
cultural identity in an age of mobile subjectivity and the
deterritorialization of cultural practices." Stephen J. Goldberg
(Hamilton College), author of Dislocating the Center: Contemporary
Chinese Art Beyond National Borders. "The Inner Landscape: The
Paintings of Gao Xingjian presents almost 300 paintings by the
contemporary artist, poet, film-maker, author, and Nobel Laureate
Gao Xingjian. Jason C. Kuo's erudite study not only details Gao's
development as an intellectual, but also contextualizes and
explores his attitudes toward writing, painting, and film-making in
the interstices of 'East' and 'West'." Katharine P. Burnett
(University of California, Davis), author of Dimensions of
Originality: Essays in Seventeenth-Century Chinese Art Criticism.
"The Inner Landscape: The Paintings of Gao Xingjian by Jason C. Kuo
is a most thought-provoking and intelligent study of the art of Gao
Xingjian. Kuo, driven by a desire for synthesis in his scholarship,
brings a modernist practice to bear on a long tradition of
intellectual discourse in China." Frances Klapthor, Baltimore
Museum of Art.
This volume addresses questions of canon, value, historiographical
interest, and large-scale historical structures as they apply to
Chinese art history in the context of post-colonial studies. As the
field of Chinese art history moves into postcolonial studies,
institutional critique, and economic and social contextualization,
it is especially important that questions of canon, value,
historiographical interest, and large-scale historical structures
not be left behind. The aim of this book is to examine critically
the historiography of the field of Chinese painting, to assess what
achievements have been made, and to understand what and how
personal backgrounds of scholars and institutional constraints may
have affected various practices in the field. "This volume is a
comprehensive and critically self-aware introduction to the history
of Chinese art historiography in America, and includes reflections
on more general issues of the encounters between East and West.
This is a timely, much-needed book." -Olga Lomova, Director,
Institute of East Asian Studies, Charles University, Prague, and
Dircetor, Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation International Sinological
Center, Prague; Editor of Recarving the Dragon: Understanding
Chinese Poetics. "This volume provides a true dialogical
interaction of ideas in scholarship and reveals Western, Chinese
and Japanese approaches to Far Eastern artistic heritage. The
mutual elucidation of pedagogical wisdoms brings about salutary
heuristic lessons that help readers overcome assumptions in which
Western theoretical methodology has been trapped for so long."
-Shigemi Inaga, Professor, International Research Center for
Japanese Studies (Kyoto, Japan); John Kluge Chair of Modern Culture
in the Kluge Center at the Library of Congress; Editor of Crossing
Cultural Borders: Beyond Reciprocal Anthropology; author of Kaiga
no tasogare: Eduaru Mane botsugo no toso . "This volume contributes
importantly toward understanding the current state of Chinese art
history in the US and its complicated historiography. It is
provocatively argued, engagingly written, and passionately felt."
-Katharine P. Burnett, Associate Professor of Art History,
University of California at Davis, has published articles in Art
History, Word & Image, and Orientations and is working on a
book, Dimensions of Originality: Essays in Seventeenth-Century
Chinese Art. "This volume is the next in Jason Kuo's long
bibliography of original and important contributions to the study
of Chinese painting. Each essay raises questions that draw Chinese
painting into the discourse of modernism more generally." -Nancy S.
Steinhardt, Professor of East Asian Art and Curator of Chinese Art
at the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, University of
Pennsylvania. Author of Chinese Traditional Architecture, Chinese
Imperial City Planning, and Liao Architecture. Editor and adaptor
of Chinese Architecture, and co-editor of Hawaii Reader in
Traditional Chinese Culture.
The aims of this volume are to reflect on the fundamental issues in
the theory and practice of connoisseurship of Chinese painting in
particular and those of connoisseurship of art in general. One of
the most important challenges facing art historians and museum
professionals today is that graduate schools have produced art
historians with serious weakness, particularly a lack of direct
firsthand experience with works of art in the original. If we base
our construction of art history on works of calligraphy and
painting and on the inscriptions, colophons, and seal impressions
that accompany them, we must first make sure of their authorship
and identity. "This fascinating book, the first one in which
connoisseurship in Chinese painting and in European painting are
discussed together, enables us not only to confront several
approaches in the authentication of Chinese painting, but also to
benefit from the Western art studies in connoisseurial analysis and
the complex nature of copywork." -Michele Pirazzoli-t'Serstevens,
formerly Curator of Far Eastern Art of the Musee Guimet, Paris,
currently Directeur d'etudes, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes,
Paris, author of La Civilisation du Royaume de Dian a l'epoque Han,
La Chine des Han: histoire et civilization, Giuseppe Castiglione
(1688-1766): Peintre et Architecte a la Cour de Chine, and editor
of Storia Universale dell'Arte: La Cina. "These thoughtful essays,
addressing a range of historical, cultural, and philosophical
issues, should remind all of us that the objectness of objects is
the starting point from which all else follows." -Peter Sturman,
Chair, Department of the History of Art and Architecture,
University of California, Santa Barbara, and author of Mi Fu: Style
and the Art of Calligraphy in Northern Song China. "Connoisseurship
is the most fundamental yet often overlooked aspect of art history:
it has the ability to affirm or completely change our understanding
of an art work, the artist's oeuvre, or even art history itself.
This volume is the first extensive investigation of Chinese
connoisseurship as a general and theoretical discipline." -Pauline
Lin, Bryn Mawr College, has published articles in The Review of
Politics and Dictionary of Literary Biography: Classical Chinese
Writers and is working on a book, Nature Inside Out: The Culture of
Landscape from the City of Ye (196-240). "Connoisseurship is the
necessary base of art history, for until we know who made what
when, we cannot engage in interpretation of paintings. Bringing
together scholars from diverse backgrounds, this volume provides
the necessary basis for the most important task facing art
historians today, the creation of a true world art history." -
David Carrier, Champney Family Professor, Case Western Reserve
University/Cleveland Institute of Art and author of Sean Scully,
Museum Skepticism: A History of the Display of Art in Public
Galleries, and A World Art History.
Visual Culture in Shanghai, 1850s-1930s is a study of formal and
informal meanings of Haipai ("Shanghai School" or "Shanghai
Style"), as seen through the paintings of the Shanghai school as
well as other media of visual representation. The book provides us
a point of entry into the nexus of relationships that structured
the encounter between China and the West as experienced by the
treaty-port Chinese in their everyday life. Exploring such
relationships gives us a better sense of the ultimate significance
of Shanghai's rise as China's dominant metropolitan center. This
book will appeal not only to art historians, but also to students
of history, gender studies, women's studies, and culture studies
who are interested in modern China as well as questions of art
patronage, nationalism, colonialism, visual culture, and
representation of women. "This book constitutes a significant
contribution to the literature about a period and a city that were
pivotal to the emergence of modern China." -Richard K. Kent,
Franklin & Marshall College. "This book navigates the
complexity of Chinese modernity.. It bridges, conceptually and
visually, the China of the past to present-day Shanghai, the symbol
of the urban economy of 21st-century China." -Chao-Hui Jenny Liu,
New York University. "Shanghai was the rising and dynamic
metropolis, where many aspects of modernity were embraced with
enthusiasm. Pictorial art was no longer the domain of the elite,
but professionalization, commercialization, popularization, and
Westernization contributed to the dissemination of images to a
larger and diverse audience." -Minna Torma, University of Helsinki.
Modern Chinese painting embodies the constant renewal and
reinvigorations of Chinese civilization amidst rebellions, reforms,
and revolutions, even if the process may appear confusing and
bewildering. It also demonstrates the persistence of tradition and
limits of continuities and changes in modern Chinese culture. Most
significantly, it compels us to ask several important questions in
the study of modern Chinese culture: How extensively can cultural
tradition be re-interpreted before it is subverted? At what point
is creative re-invention an act of betrayal of tradition? How has
selective borrowing from Chinese tradition and foreign cultrue
enabled modern Chinese artists to sustain themselves in the modern
world? By focusing on the art of Huang Pin-hung (1865-1955),
particularly his late work, this book attempts to provide some
answers to these questions.
The present volume focuses on the uses of theory originating in
non-Chinese places in the creation, curating, and criticism of
contemporary Chinese visual culture. In the past two decades,
contemporary Chinese art and film have attracted a great deal of
media and academic attention in the West, and scholars have adopted
a variety of approaches in Chinese film and visual studies. The
present volume focuses on the uses and status of theory originating
in non-Chinese places in the creation, curating, narration, and
criticism of contemporary Chinese visual culture (broadly defined
to include traditional media in the visual arts as well as cinema,
installation, video, etc.). Contributors reflect on the written
and, even more interestingly, the unwritten assumptions on the part
of artists, critics, historians, and curators in applying or
resisting Western theories. The essays in the present volume
demonstrate clearly that Western theory can be useful in
explicating Chinese text, as long as it is applied judiciously; the
essays, taken as a whole, also suggest that cultural exchange is
never a matter of one-way street. Historically, ideas from
traditional Chinese aesthetics have also traveled to the West, and
it is a challenge to examine what travels and what does not, as
well as what makes such travel possible or impossible. The present
volume thus provides us an opportunity to rethink travels of
theories and texts across cultures, languages, disciplines, and
media. "The authors in this volume demonstrate how theory can be
deployed judiciously, and so illuminate the methodological
challenges faced by scholars in a rapidly evolving field.
Intellectually rigorous and yet accessible, the book is a
much-needed and valuable contribution to art historical
scholarship." Dr. Wenny Teo, Manuela and Iwan Wirth Lecturer in
Modern and Contemporary Asian Art, The Courtauld Institute of Art,
London. "This collection of essays offers multifaceted approaches
and perspectives that demonstrate forcefully how Western theories
have appropriated Chinese visual texts into the discourse of
English scholarship. This is a must-read book for anyone intending
to read or write about contemporary Chinese art and cinema.
Shu-chin Tsui, Bowdoin College, author of Women Through the Lens:
Gender and Nation in a Century of Chinese Cinema . "The theories,
ranging from Bakhtin's reading to Chinese Daoist/Chan Buddhist
notions, and engaging with postmodern perspectives and
globalization, are boldly used to prompt readers to reinterpret
contemporary Chinese art and film." Haili Kong, Swarthmore College,
coeditor of One Hundred Years of Chinese Cinema.
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