Ai Weiwei
Chen Guangwu
Chen Zaiyan
Dai Guangyu
Ding Yi
Dong
Xiaoming
Feng Mengbo
Gu Wenda
He Sen
Hong Hao
Jia
Jin Feng
Jin
Jiangbo
Li Xi
Li Zhenwei
Lu Hao
Lu Qing
Ma Ke
Mao Tongqiang
Qiu
Shihua
Qiu Zhijie
Shan Fan
Shao Fan
Tian Wie
Tsang Kin
Wah
Utopia Group
Wang Qingsong
Wu Shanzhuan
Xiao Yu
Xu Bing
Xue
Song
Yangjiang Group
Yang Xinguang
Yuan Gong
Zhang Fan
Zhang
Huan
Zhang Wie
Zhou Tiehai
'Secret Signs. Calligraphy in contemporary chinese art'. The exhibition shows some artwors that used different media like calligraphy, photography video, installation and sculpture.
In collaboration with the M+ Museum in Hong Kong and the Sigg
Collection from Switzerland Deichtorhallen Hamburg are showing a major
exhibition focusing on Chinese Calligraphy in Contemporary Art at the
Falckenberg Collection in Hamburg-Harburg from November 8, 2014 to
February 8, 2015. The show will take place in the context of the event
China Time Hamburg 2014.
Chinese characters are an expression of Chinese culture and heritage
that constitutes the oldest continuously used writing system in the
world. Introduced as early as 300 BC in its standardized form,
calligraphy quickly became a decisive key to social status. Those who
mastered the usage of calligraphy demonstrated authority and as such
gained social status. As a further result, calligraphy established
itself as a symbol of cultural life and an educated elite. The reform
of the calligraphic system under Mao Zedong in 1956 has profoundly
changed calligraphy as a cultural constant. The traditional cursive
scripts once utilised by the literati were abandoned in favour of
simplified scripts to be employed by the population at large. Over the
course of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76), the so called
big-character posters provided a space for reciprocal communication
between the Maoist authorities and the masses.
This new medium transformed the art of calligraphy from a practice of
the elite to a revolutionary weapon of the people. The legacy of the
Cultural Revolution continues to weigh on contemporary Chinese visual
culture, figuring prominently in the work of contemporary artists with
calligraphy as a means to come to terms with an own Chinese identity.
This process is largely influenced by cultural heritage, social
uncertainty left over from the Mao reign as well as constraints
imposed by globalisation and its Western values and traditions.
Themes covered in the exhibition will focus on the deconstruction of
calligraphy (anti-calligraphy), aspects of commerce as well as
elements of triviality in calligraphy as a cultural medium of the
masses. Additional works will deal with questions of individualism as
part of the long and enduring process of learning the art of
calligraphy. A further approach to the art of calligraphy is
represented by works that focus on the effect of new media on the
intuitive and spontaneous aspects of writing.
Art works shown in the exhibition will comprise both two- and
three-dimensional works of different media: calligraphy, photography,
video, installation and sculpture. The exhibition will cover
approximately 30 years of artistic practice starting in the 1980s
until works especially commissioned for the show as by Ai Weiwei.
Works on display will include contributions by 38 renowned Chinese
artists such as Gu Wenda, Xu Bing, Qiu Zhijie, Zhang Huan as well as
Zheng Guogu.
Together with numerous cooperation partners like the Hamburg
Konfuzius-Institute and the Hamburg University Deichtorhallen Hamburg
is offering a wide-ranged programme accompanying the exhibition. Among
them are different practical calligraphy workshops, a concert in the
context of »New Music and China«, panel discussions and lectures
with international experts.
Image: ZHANG Huan: Family Tree, 2000 (Ausschnitt). © ZHANG Huan, courtesy M+ Sigg Collection, Hong Kong. By donation
Press Contact:
Angelika Leu-Barthel and Matthias Schönebäumer
Tel. 040-32103-250/-261, presse@deichtorhallen.de.
Opening Day: On Sunday, November 9, 2014, 12 to 17 p.m.
at the Falckenberg Collection
Falckenberg Collection | Deichtorhallen Hamburg
Wilstorfer Straße 71, Tor
Admission
10 Euros, reduced 7 Euros, Admission for children up to 18 years of age is free.
Opening Hours
every first Thursday of the month 11 am – 9 pm (except on holidays)