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	<title>Haudenschildgarage &#187; Shi Yong</title>
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		<title>&#8216;NEVER FORGET THE IMAGE STRUGGLE!&#8217; at the TOP Contemporary Art Center</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/4516/never-forget-the-image-struggle-at-the-top-contemporary-art-center.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Dec 2011 22:26:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Zhenzhong]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The exhibition <strong><em>Never Forget The Image Struggle!</em></strong> was inspired by the famous sentence: “Never forget class struggle!”. This slogan and its deterrent tone was unforgettable during its time. On view from December 9 to December 25 at the TOP Contemporary Art Center, the exhibition includes the artists: <strong>MadeIn Company, Zhang Ding, Zhou Xiaohu, TOF group, Jin Feng, Shi Qing, Zhang Xian+Hipic, Shao Yi, He An, Shi Yong,</strong> and<strong> Yang Zhenzhong</strong>.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The exhibition <strong><em>Never Forget The Image Struggle!</em></strong> was inspired by the famous sentence: “Never forget class struggle!”. This slogan and its deterrent tone was unforgettable during its time. On view from December 9 to December 25 at the TOP Contemporary Art Center, the exhibition includes the artists: <strong>MadeIn Company, Zhang Ding, Zhou Xiaohu, TOF group, Jin Feng, Shi Qing, Zhang Xian+Hipic, Shao Yi, He An, Shi Yong,</strong> and<strong> Yang Zhenzhong</strong>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.artlinkart.com/en/space/exh_yr/521avuri/857bxwsq">Click here to read more about TOP</a></p>
<blockquote><p><em>Does art today expect anything from images? It seems instead that almost everyone possesses the rights and means to produce pictures and artists resemble aborigines defending an isolated island, waiting for their loss. They however still aspire to declare their special rights and <em>Never Forget The Image Struggle! </em>is such a declaration, it is also a “loss”, warning that they are facing. Simultaneously, the sentence “Never Forget The Image Struggle!” isn’t a warning directed to the artists only but to everyone. In fact the identity of the artist can easily be taken, and those “special rights” are similar to a reward that always need to be fought for. By the end, the responsibility of the artist is to take the role of a “busybody”. The definition of “Image Struggle” transcends the art system. As a “pure space of images” it constitutes a composition between society, reality, politics and aestheticism revolution, it is an internal democratic space. Within these boundaries, “special rights” isn’t a free meal. In this “real desert” it reclaims the….Never forget!</em></p></blockquote>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4373/supported-program-hipic.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/hipic-banner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4373/supported-program-hipic.htm" target="_top">supported program: Hipic</a></div><p id="description">Hipic is an independent, global art project created by Chinese artists Yang Zhenzhong, Xu Zhen, and Huang Kui.  Hipic launched on September 4, 2007 and offers the opportunity to its users to display their own pictures in synchronization. Hipic is ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4491/huge-character-2nd-stage-collaboration-by-tang-maohong-zhang-ding-and-sun-xun-at-shanghart.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/TangBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4491/huge-character-2nd-stage-collaboration-by-tang-maohong-zhang-ding-and-sun-xun-at-shanghart.htm" target="_top">"Huge Character 2nd Stage": Collaboration by Tang Maohong, Zhang Ding and Sun Xun at ShanghART</a></div><p id="description">ShanghART Beijing opened the second phase of the collaborative project Huge Character on October 30. It is open until November 10, 2011.



This project is a two-stage collaboration between artists Tang Maohong, Zhang Ding and Sun Xun. The fi ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4414/what-follows-is-lisa-tan-at-andreas-grimm-munchen.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/TanBannerNews.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4414/what-follows-is-lisa-tan-at-andreas-grimm-munchen.htm" target="_top">'What follows is....': Lisa Tan at Andreas Grimm Munchen</a></div><p id="description">What follows is an ordinary situation, an episode to be related and forgotten
15 April 2011 - 4 June 2011
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		<title>Bird Head and Shi Yong at the 54th Venice Art Biennale</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/4430/bird-head-and-shi-yong-at-the-54th-venice-art-biennale.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Wed, 18 May 2011 21:03:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[News]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Song Tao]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[ShanghART Gallery is pleased to announce the participation of Bird Head (Ji Weiyu &#38; Song Tao) in the upcoming 54th Venice Art Biennale ILLUMInations, opening June 4 &#8211; November 27, 2011 and Shi Yong in Glasstress 2011 at Palazzo Cavalli Franchetti, opening June 4 – November 27, 2011.
Bird Head is a photographic collective founded in 2004, consisting [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>ShanghART Gallery is pleased to announce the participation of <strong>Bird Head</strong> (<strong>Ji Weiyu</strong> &amp;<strong> Song Tao</strong>) in the upcoming <strong>54</strong><sup><strong>th</strong></sup><strong> Venice Art Biennale </strong><em><strong>ILLUMInations</strong>, </em>opening June 4 &#8211; November 27, 2011<em> </em>and<em> </em><strong>Shi Yong </strong>in <em>Glasstress 2011</em> at <strong>Palazzo Cavalli Franchetti</strong>, opening June 4 – November 27, 2011.</p>
<p><strong>Bird Head</strong> is a photographic collective founded in 2004, consisting of <strong>Ji Weiyu</strong> (1980) and <strong>Song Tao</strong> (1979). Many, if not most, of their photographs are of themselves and their immediate surroundings. A strongly autobiographical strain or diary-like narrative runs through the work. There is an intensity and spontaneity that offers a glimpse into their world without any artifice. Every moment is shown as it is, with no convolution or adornment. The pictures (47&#215;57 cm) presented in Venice – black-and-white and colour – are organized formally and presented in grids delineated by a poem in Chinese characters.</p>
<p>It is a visual diary of their friendship and of the city of Shanghai; a sum of interesting faces, expressions, and instances. Seen through their lens, they seem to become fully and inevitably themselves, with their personalities and physical appearance integrally linked. All of these elements are presented as casual snapshots, but that also has the snapshot’s uncanny ability to reveal anguish and loss. The photographs document the sum of instances that life is about. Bird Head embraces everything, despite affliction. The aesthetic is not a corrective to life, or life as someone wishes it were, but as complex as the thing itself. Their lives are their work and their work, their lives.</p>
<p><strong>Ji Weiyu</strong> (1980) and <strong>Song Tao</strong> (1979) live and work in Shanghai. The artists graduated from the Shanghai Arts and Carafts School (2000). Recent exhibitions include Artist File 2011, National Art Center, Tokyo, Japan (2011), China Power Station IV, Pinacoteca Agnelli, Torino, Italy (2010), Emporium, The National Museum of Technology ‘Leonardo da Vinci’, Milano, Italy (2009), China Now, Max Lang Gallery, NYC, (2009), China Power Station II, Astrup Fearnley Museum of Modern Art, Oslo, Norway (2007), Bird Head 2006-2007 Photography Show, BizArt Art Center, Shanghai, China (2007), and Individual Position II, ShanghART H-Space, Shanghai, China (2007).</p>
<div><strong>Shi Yong</strong>’s work embraces modernization and the ideology of consumerism as the basis for self-imagination and creation. He has produced a series of photo-based works around the concept of the ideal Shanghai citizen. It is an ongoing multifaceted project that explores images of consumption, commodity and the development of the culture industry. One series, entitled “Made in China – Welcome to China” (1999), consists of hand-painted plaster models of a young businessman in a Mao suit, sunglasses, briefcase and waving. The image of the ideal citizen used for the statue was the outcome of an Internet project through which Shi Yong asked volunteers to vote for the ideal way of looking. The individual now transforms the identity of his or her self by following the logic of commodity market surveys. It is a composite image that Shi Yong has repeatedly used in other pieces such as “Longing For” (2000) and “You Cannot Clone It, But You Can Buy It” (2001). The iconic figure is morphed through the agency of the marketplace.</p>
<p>Recently, Shi Yong has focused his attention on large-scale installations and architectural models imbued with an absurd twist of humor. Most notably, his mixed media installation “Flying Q” is of a UFO built with the purpose of opening up the sky. The flying object comes with no additional explanation, but might be recognized as just another signature vision of and interventions into the imaginary world of Shi Yong. His subversive approach pokes fun at architecture based on rules and pre-established schemas. Shi Yong fabricates a colorful and ironic architectural structure that is at once a parody of serious design and its synthesis. In short, his work is an amalgam of Shanghai’s eclectic ‘anything goes’ attitude towards the built environment.</p>
<p>Shi Yong was born in Shanghai in 1963. He graduated from Light Industrial School, Fine Art Department. He resides and works in Shanghai. Shi Yong has exhibited widely since the early 1990’s. Recent shows include Follow Me!, Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2005), Second Guangzhou Triennale, Guangsong Museum of Art (2005), Zooming into Focus, China National Art Museum (Beijing, 2005), Felicidad Indecible, Tamayo Museum of Contemporary Art (Mexico, 2005), The Heaven, The World, ShanghART Gallery &amp; H-Space (Shanghai, 2004), Shanghai Biennale (2002), Bienal de Sao Paulo (2002) and Bienal de Maia (1999).<br />
(check links on the left for Shi Yong&#8217;s internet works)</p>
</div>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2422/artist-in-residence-shi-yong.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Shi-Yong-021.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2422/artist-in-residence-shi-yong.htm" target="_top">artist-in-residence: Shi Yong</a></div><p id="description">
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The premiere performance of Super Angel was commissioned by the haudenschildGarage and completed during Shi Yong's residency at the haudenschildGarage from October 22 - November 12, 2003.  This piece was produced in collaboration with Tina Yape ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3556/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-beijing-china.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/ZoomingBeijing-e1264306305808.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3556/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-beijing-china.htm" target="_top">Zooming into Focus Exhibition -  Beijing, China</a></div><p id="description">STATION V: BEIJING, CHINA

"Zooming into Focus is the first retrospective show of Chinese contemporary photography and video ever held at the National Art Museum, Beijing.  It reveals the changes in social notions and technology in Chinese cont ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2426/performance-shi-yongs-premiere-of-super-angel.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Super-AngelBanner2.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2426/performance-shi-yongs-premiere-of-super-angel.htm" target="_top">performance: Shi Yong's Premiere of "Super Angel"</a></div><p id="description">
On November 8, 2003 Chinese artist Shi Yong held the premiere performance of Super Angel at San Diego State University. He invited people to be part of the development of his website and performance by participating in a conversation with him t ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4491/huge-character-2nd-stage-collaboration-by-tang-maohong-zhang-ding-and-sun-xun-at-shanghart.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/TangBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4491/huge-character-2nd-stage-collaboration-by-tang-maohong-zhang-ding-and-sun-xun-at-shanghart.htm" target="_top">"Huge Character 2nd Stage": Collaboration by Tang Maohong, Zhang Ding and Sun Xun at ShanghART</a></div><p id="description">ShanghART Beijing opened the second phase of the collaborative project Huge Character on October 30. It is open until November 10, 2011.



This project is a two-stage collaboration between artists Tang Maohong, Zhang Ding and Sun Xun. The fi ...</p></li></ul><div id="wp_thumbie_rl2"></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>After the Market&#8217;s Boom: A Case Study of the Haudenschild Collection by Michelle McCoy</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/534/after-the-markets-boom-a-case-study-of-the-haudenschild-collection-by-michelle-mccoy.htm</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 12 Dec 2009 19:34:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Press]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Britta Erickson]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cao Fei]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chen Shaoxiong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contemporary Chinese Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Feng Mengbo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Geng Jianyi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Gu Dexin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hai Bo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hans Ulrich Obrist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haudenschild Collection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hong Hao]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hou Hanru]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hu Jieming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Kan Xuan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Liu Wei]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lorenz Helbling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lu Chunsheng]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lu Leiping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lui Wei]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Martina Koppel-Yang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Pi Li]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Song Tao]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tang Maohong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tina Yapelli]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Waling Boers]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wang Jin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wang Youshen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Weng Fen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Xiang Liqing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Xu Zhen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Fudong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Jiechang]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Zhenzhong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yishu Journal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yu Youhan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhao Bandi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhao Nengzhi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zheng Guogu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhou Tiehai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhu Jia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zooming into Focus Exhibition]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Located in the hills of La Jolla, a seaside resort community near San Diego, California, the residence of Chris and Eloisa Haudenschild is home to a major U.S. collection of contemporary Chinese video art and photography. The Haudenschilds began collecting contemporary Chinese video and photography in the late 1990s, when these mediums were beginning to become as widely used and important as they are today, and just before the beginning of the market’s current boom. ]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>After the Market&#8217;s Boom: A Case Study of the Haudenschild Collection</h3>
<p><strong>By Michelle McCoy for the <em>Yishu Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art</em>, December 2007</strong></p>
<div id="attachment_4254" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 235px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Yang-Fudong-Honey-Video-Still.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4254" title="Yang-Fudong-Honey-Video-Still" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Yang-Fudong-Honey-Video-Still-225x300.jpg" alt="" width="225" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Yang Fudong, Honey, 2003, video</p></div>
<h5>Introduction</h5>
<p>Located in the hills of La Jolla, a seaside resort community near San Diego, California, the residence of Chris and Eloisa Haudenschild is home to a major U.S. collection of contemporary Chinese video art and photography. It includes the work of roughly twenty-eight Chinese artists, including, significantly, <strong>Song Tao</strong>’s <em>Life is Wonderful</em> (2003), a large floor-top photo installation; <em>Honey 2 </em>(2003), a video by Hugo Boss Prize-nominated <strong>Yang Fudong</strong>; and<strong> Xu Zhen</strong>’s 1999 photomontage <em>Sewer</em>. In addition, the Haudenschild collection includes roughly one hundred and twenty holdings by ninety artists from the Americas, Europe, and other parts of Asia. Notable pieces include a triptych from <strong>Francis Alÿs</strong>’s series of paintings titled <em>The Liar</em> (ca. 1995), a photograph of <strong>Kristof Wodiczko</strong>’s<em> Tijuana Projection</em> (2002), and a painting from <strong>Komar &amp; Melamid</strong>’s <em>Most Wanted</em> series dated at 2000 by the collector.(1)</p>
<p>The Haudenschilds began collecting contemporary Chinese video and photography in the late 1990s, when these mediums were beginning to become as widely used and important as they are today, and just before the beginning of the market’s current boom. Since then, prices for paintings by a few Chinese artists have topped two million dollars,(2) and domestic collectors have entered the market in a significant way.(3) In November 2006, for instance, a Chinese collector purchased a Liu Xiaodong painting at a Beijing auction for $2.7 million, the highest price paid at auction for a painting by a Chinese artist who began working after 1979. (4)</p>
<p>The current overall global art market also finds that contemporary art has, for the first time, “truly begun to rival the historically dominant Impressionism and Modern categories” at auction.(5) Evidence to the overall market’s growth, The Financial Times has recently been publishing how-to articles about art collecting in general and at least one art hedge fund has been established. Situated within this historic global market growth, expansion into China and other regions is seen as having contributed significantly overall. In addition to the work having dramatically appreciated, China has a new class of art collectors, with new levels of wealth among them. In fact, expansion into China and other “new” regions is often used in the case against the market’s potential crash.</p>
<div id="attachment_4255" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/sewer-copy.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4255" title="sewer-copy" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/sewer-copy-300x31.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="31" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Xu Zhen, Sewer, 1998, photograph</p></div>
<p>Within this, the private collector maintains a unique position. On the one hand, as <strong>Britta Erickson</strong> writes, “Private collections are well suited to capturing the life of a vibrant art movement, driven as they are by passion, unencumbered by institutional impedimenta.”(6) Not necessarily affixed to any institution or gallery, today’s private collector has the flexibility to build a historically complete collection, so long as he or she has the means and access to do so. On the other hand, private collectors are not under any obligation to remain loyal to any particular mission. As Lu Jie, founder and director of the Long March Project, said, “ . . . we’ve observed that many [collectors] started out building a big collection and ended up selling the artwork in auctions . . . . It really takes time to get to know what the real agenda is that a collector has.” (7) However, there are standards and traditions by which collectors are judged, which the late Jonathan Napack, former Asia adviser to Art Basel describes: to be considered a “collector,” one must have a certain amount of commitment and knowledge.(8)</p>
<p>Chris and Eloisa Haudenschild’s level of commitment and knowledge is evidenced by the way they support contemporary art beyond collecting. The Haudenschild Foundation supports exhibitions and sponsors artists’ and scholars’ projects and programs such as symposia and residencies at the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>. Perhaps their most ambitious project yet was an exhibition entitled <em>Zooming into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography and Video from the Haudenschild Collection</em>, which took place from 2003 to 2005 and traveled to venues in San Diego, Shanghai, Tijuana, Singapore, and Beijing.</p>
<div id="attachment_4256" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/PolEqOne131.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4256" title="PolEqOne131" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/PolEqOne131-300x200.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="200" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Cao Fei’s and Pi Li’s presentation at the Political Equator Garage Talk at the haudenschildGarage, June 2006</p></div>
<p>In her catalogue essay for this exhibition, Erickson addresses the collection’s strengths: “Representing a personal vision, it has not been expected to present a complete or historic view of the field. Nevertheless, it has captured a major slice of Chinese photography and video, representative of a signal moment”(9) in the field’s entrance onto the global stage. Scholar <strong>Martina Köppel-Yang</strong> recognized it as the first collection of its kind, (10) and <strong>Tina Yapelli</strong>, Director of the University Gallery at San Diego State University and the exhibition’s organizer, lauded it as “the most important collection of contemporary Chinese video and photography in the world.” (11) <strong>Lorenz Helbling</strong>, the Haudenschilds’ longstanding dealer, writes, “The collection is a very ‘open’ collection . . .. It doesn’t aim to fix images people should have of China, or to transmit stereotypes of China. It’s not about ‘signature works’ or ‘trophy pieces’—it’s more about a spirit, about involvement.” The Haudenschilds, he writes, are “great collectors.”(12)</p>
<h5>The Collection</h5>
<p>To date, in addition to work by <strong>Yang Fudong, Song Tao</strong>, and <strong>Xu Zhen</strong>, the Haudenschild collection consists of works by <strong>Cao Fei, Chen Shaoxiong, Feng Mengbo, Geng Jianyi, Gu Dexin, Hai Bo, Hong Hao, Hu Jieming, Kan Xuan, Liu Wei, Lu Chunsheng, Shi Yong, Tang Maohong, Wang Jin, Wang Youshen, Weng Fen, Xiang Liqing, Yang Yong, Yang Zhenzhong, Yu Youhan, Zhao Bandi, Zhao Nengzhi, Zheng Guogu, Zhou Tiehai</strong>, and<strong> Zhu Jia</strong>. All of the works in the collection are photography, video/animation or computer graphics, or photo-based installations, except for two oil paintings and one print. The photographs are from editions of one hundred or smaller, with the majority of them from editions of ten or fewer. All of the videos are from editions of fewer than ten. (13)</p>
<div id="attachment_4259" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 249px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/rice_5.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4259" title="rice_5" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/rice_5-239x300.jpg" alt="" width="239" height="300" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Yang Zhenzhong, 922 Rice Corns, 2000, video</p></div>
<p>Of these seventy individual works produced by twenty-eight artists, two of the works were produced by women artists: Cao Fei and Kan Xuan. Three of the artists are thirty years old or younger, while ten are between thirty-one and forty, fourteen are between forty-one and fifty, and one artist is over sixty. Most of them are based in Shanghai, with a few based in Beijing, Hangzhou, Shenzhen, Yangjiang, Guangzhou, and Haikou, Hainan. Only Kan Xuan maintains a residence both in Beijing and abroad, in Amsterdam.</p>
<p>Eloisa Haudenschild said she is primarily interested in collecting as a way to assist and connect with emerging artists. She explained that when artists have been recognized and supported by other collectors, she maintains relationships with them, but her interest shifts from collecting their work to assisting them in other ways, such as funding projects. With charismatic ebullience, Haudenschild said she has never sold a work, nor has she bought work by an artist she has not met. She has never attempted to acquire work from an artist directly and has always used an agent or dealer. She said she has never asked the price of an artwork. The works have been acquired through studio visits and meetings with artists, stories she recounts with pleasure. Haudenschild refers to the first trips in which she began to acquire Chinese artwork as “my love affair.” (14)</p>
<h5>Background</h5>
<p>Eloisa Haudenschild, née Rodriguez-Carbornell, was born into an affluent family in Buenos Aires, Argentina, who were involved in real estate and politics. When asked, she said she probably could be considered a third- or fourth-generation collector, and keeps some of her family’s paintings and antiques in the La Jolla estate. She met Chris Haudenschild, an astrophysicst-entrepreneur and native of Los Angeles, skiing in Portillo in 1973. Chris Haudenschild, who has roots in Iowa and Indiana, is a first generation collector. Together they have two daughters, Rita and Anna, whose artwork is also listed in the collection’s catalogue.</p>
<div id="attachment_4258" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Beijing-Opening47.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4258" title="Beijing-Opening47" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Beijing-Opening47-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Eloisa Haudenschild, Laura Zhou, and Ma Shulin (Deputy Director, National Art Museum of China) at the opening of Zooming into Focus, November 2005, National Art Museum of China, Beijing</p></div>
<p>Eloisa Haudenschild’s educational background is in psychology. She was involved in dance and choreography before pursuing her interest in contemporary art. She cut her art-collecting teeth in the early 1990s with contemporary work from Latin America. At that time, she was president of the bi-national board of inSite, a network of contemporary art programs and commissioned projects that map the liminal border area of San Diego and Tijuana.</p>
<p>Haudenschild said, “I traveled with the board and the directors to Mexico City every two months or so, visiting artists and studios, traveling with them and having fun. That afforded me the opportunity of meeting some extraordinary artists like Francis Alÿs, a good friend, who together with other good friends have since become international figures in the art world. There, I really got a firsthand experience of the situation. I saw firsthand their need of support.”</p>
<p>When Chris Haudenschild, founder and president of CliniComp, a healthcare information management system, began expanding his business into China, the couple began making regular trips to Shanghai. As she had done in Latin America, Eloisa Haudenschild sought to investigate the local art scene in Shanghai.</p>
<h5>Approach</h5>
<div id="attachment_4257" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Hangzhou31.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4257" title="Hangzhou31" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Hangzhou31-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Participants in the symposium “Distance—A Discussion on Contemporary Chinese Photography and Video” at the China Art Academy, Hangzhou, March 2004. Left to right: Pi Li, Eloisa Haudenschild, Waling Boers, Martina Koppel-Yang, Laura Zhou, Evelyne Jouanno, Hou Hanru, Jonathan Napak, Rudolf Stoert, Anna Haudenschild, Chris Haudenschild, Rita Haudenschild, Gridthiya Gaweewong, Wang Gongxin, Hans Ulrich Obrist, Wang Du, Zhang Peili, and Zheng Shengtian</p></div>
<p>Fueled by passion and confidence, she says, they acquired twenty works with their first purchase of Chinese art. Her husband was very supportive, encouraging her to take those twenty and, in her words, “double it up—go for forty or fifty.”</p>
<p>Haudenschild recounts the late 1990s as an environment very different from the art world in the large urban centers of today’s China. “I spent a lot of time looking around,” she said of her first trips. “My husband and I went to the Shanghai Art Museum and saw a show of work by the Corsinos, a brother and sister who live in France. I was so moved by the work, and was bummed about not being able to share it with anyone. It was so nice to see something besides calligraphy and ink washes. I thought, ‘Somebody did this, some curator—someone has this sensibility,’ but I didn’t know who it was. So, I saw this guy walking around [the Shanghai Art Museum] who looked a little like Salvador Dali. I thought, ‘I’m going to ask this guy.’ And of course, it was Dadou.”</p>
<p>Dadou, or Davide Quadrio, founded BizArt, a self-supported non-profit gallery, in Shanghai in 1998. Along with ShanghART, it shares billing as one of the oldest contemporary art institutions in the city.</p>
<p>“I said [to Dadou], I’ve been coming here for three years, where is the artwork?’ He said, ‘Go to ShanghART and see Lorenz.’ So, my husband and I immediately caught a cab and went to [the gallery in] Fuxing Park. As you may know, getting around in those days wasn’t as easy as it is now.”</p>
<p>“I walked into [ShanghART]. Then, I met Laura Zhou,” Mr. Helbling’s partner at ShanghART. “It was genius from that moment on with Laura. . . . We are very close. She calls me ‘mommy.’”</p>
<p>Previously, Mr. Helbling had been showing work at the Portman Ritz-Carlton Hotel, a massive hotel, convention centre and residence in Shanghai. “He used to carry paintings around on the back of his motorcycle trying to sell them, because at that time he didn’t have a space,” recounts Haudenschild. Since then, ShanghART has moved from its Fuxing Park location and expanded into three different spaces within Shanghai. A fourth space opened this year in Beijing.</p>
<p>“I loved the continual excitement. The best part was going to studios and apartments to look at the work,” Haudenschild says. Effusive with praise for Mr. Helbling, she said, “[Lorenz] is so good. If I wanted something and he wasn’t working with that artist, he’d get it for me. For instance Cao Fei. He facilitated that…You know, Lorenz wouldn’t sell to just anybody. He’s not as concerned with making a profit. We work together; he really wants to support the artists.”</p>
<p>She said he has never given her explicit advice, saying, “You know how it is with Lorenz, you never know [what he’s really thinking]. He’ll listen, smoking, with his coffee. And then he’ll say, ‘Eloisa, I think it’s time to think.’” Helbling and Zhou did, however, encourage her to look at certain artists.</p>
<p>After that initial trip, Haudenschild says she did a fair amount of research, contacting and meeting with scholars and curators in the field. She went to Paris and met with Hou Hanru, and exchanged emails with Britta Erickson. Perhaps in testament to the perceived need for a studied, serious, aesthetics-based treatment of contemporary Chinese art, Haudenschild said her queries to these noted curators and scholars—“from me, this little collector”—were enthusiastically received. Meantime, she continued collecting on her regular trips to China.</p>
<div id="attachment_4260" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Yang-Fudong-City-Lights.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4260" title="Yang-Fudong---City-Lights" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Yang-Fudong-City-Lights-300x239.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="239" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Yang Fudong, City Light, 2000, video</p></div>
<h5>Collecting Video And Photography</h5>
<p>In general, photography and video, like other edition-based media, have traditionally sold for less than paintings. Despite their lower value within the market, however, these media, as previously mentioned, are important to contemporary Chinese art and often become vehicles for highly conceptual projects. Critic and scholar<strong> Lu Leiping</strong> describes photography and video as the “most experimental and pioneering media today,” and “the media that more strongly maintain the Chinese characteristics.” (15) Indeed, many artists represented in the Haudenschild collection work solely in photography and video, and several are now highly sought after in large international exhibitions and biennials.</p>
<p>Haudenschild describes the process of arriving at the collection’s focus on video and photography as a product of following her own instincts. “You have to trust your eye,” she said. “I just get what I like, and the video and photography were what I liked . . .. There’s no one telling me what to do.” “I did not initially intend to collect video and photography,” she said, asserting that certain works she selected, such as Yang Fudong’s The First Intellectual photographs, did not initially appear collectible. When asked why more people don’t collect video, her response was, “I don’t know. Maybe they just haven’t warmed up to it yet.”</p>
<h5>Art: The “Alternative Asset Class”</h5>
<p>Mainstream media outlets have described the recent growth in art investment in the overall market. “Art has emerged as a serious alternative asset class in the past few years, in spite of the disdain of art lovers and the skepticism of many dealers and collectors,” wrote Deborah Brewster in an article about art collecting that appeared in the July 13, 2007 issue of <em>The Financial Times</em>.(16)  She continues:</p>
<p>“Randall Willette, who advises collectors, says: ‘There are increasingly two types of buyer in the market. The idea that you should buy purely because of your passion is becoming less common. More buyers are coming from a financial background and people want to support their buying decisions with financial information. Increasingly, art is part of the balance sheet of private clients.’” (17)</p>
<p>Indeed, much of the current dialogue surrounding contemporary Chinese art, and contemporary art as a whole, is in the language of finance.</p>
<p>Texas-based venture capitalist and wildcatter oil tycoon Robert Chaney speaks in such financial terms about his extensive contemporary Chinese art holdings. On the eve of the current exhibition of his collection at the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, Red Hot: Asian Art Now, Chaney described his strategy for “acquiring masterpieces,” using a method that is, in his words, a studied adaptation of the Warren Buffet model for investing. In the meantime, Chaney invited art dealers to sit on a panel in conjunction with the exhibition and encouraged Houston galleries to hold concurrent exhibitions of Asian art. Chaney seems determined to establish himself as an important, involved collector who also vocalizes his financial interest in the art world. (18)</p>
<p>Haudenschild, on the other hand, downplays herself as an investor. “I think I am not a good collector,” she joked, pausing in front of <em>I Usually Wait Under the Arch Roof for Sunshine</em>, a 2001 photograph by Hong Hao, who is well known for his photographs of densely accumulated objects. “For instance, the smart collector would’ve gotten [the accumulated object photos]. But me, I liked this one.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Haudenschild stands apart from the object-focused connoisseur as well, giving importance instead to her relationships with artists and members of the community. “For me, the collecting is just a token, a way to support these young guys . . . . The reward is that I have the opportunity to be part of their path.” She affectionately describes the relationships among the artists represented in her collection, noting that they have maintained their integrity and loyalty to one another as friends in spite of experiencing unequal degrees of recognition. “You know, there are many collectors who are buying pieces and then putting them away until they become valuable—they don’t even show the work. And that is such a waste—these people need exposure,” she said.</p>
<div id="attachment_4261" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Friends01.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4261" title="Friends01" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Friends01-300x225.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="225" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Eloisa Haudenschild with Chen Shaoxiong, Yang Zhenzhong, Xu Zhen, Shi Yong, Yang Fudong, and Song Tao, February 2003</p></div>
<h5>Future Of The Market</h5>
<p>Speculations on a crash or correction in the global and Chinese contemporary art markets circulate. Commenting on the market in general, Los Angeles-based billionaire collector Eli Broad was quoted in <em>The New York Times</em> in August 2007 as saying, “We’ve seen an unprecedented 68 appreciation of contemporary art in the thirty-five years that I’ve been collecting . . . . We’re bound to have a correction. I don’t know if it will happen at the November auctions, or it will happen next May.”  (19) Other recent articles have described the Chinese market as “bubbly,”   (20) and the overall market as “overblown,”  (21) and “showing signs of a bubble.” (22)</p>
<p>Jonathan Napack wrote of a grim future, with a specific focus on China: “The current ‘boom’ in the Chinese economy is all about positioning and manipulating perceptions to help attain certain short-term goals. This infects the art world as much as anybody else.” He wrote, “It will one day crash, when the speculators who are now blindly following their ‘advisors’ realize prices have started to fall and dump their collections on the market.” (23)</p>
<p>Echoing Broad’s sentiments about the overall market, Eloisa Haudenschild commented on the contemporary Chinese art market’s future, saying, “I’m worried about the market. Will there be a crash or a correction? Hopefully it will be a correction. But [regardless, as a collector,] you either have integrity or you don’t.”</p>
<div id="attachment_4262" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Shanghai-Press-Conference07.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4262" title="Shanghai-Press-Conference07" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Shanghai-Press-Conference07-300x162.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="162" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Li Xu (Curator), Zhang Peili (Artist and Director, New Media Department of China Art Academy), Eloisa Haudenschild, Li Xiangyang (then Executive Director, Shanghai Art Museum), and Lorenz Helbling (Director, ShanghART), Shanghai Art Museum Press Conference and Opening for Zooming into Focus, February 2004. </p></div>
<h5>Questions Remain</h5>
<p>Art collected by individuals from a different country than the origin of the artist is now a common practice. Today, there are numerous galleries dealing exclusively in contemporary Chinese art in cities around the Western hemisphere. The question of what influence the foreign collector of contemporary Chinese art has on the globalized art world is a complex one.</p>
<p>Lu Jie put foreign collectors in a positive light, saying, “[the artists] feel more confident to have their works sent abroad. They respect the international collectors more and believe they are the real collectors. The local collectors very often use the building of a collection as an introduction or entry into the market. The artists feel safer with their work in foreign collections.” (24)  There is also the idea that foreign collectors have helped contemporary Chinese art to be seen as valuable within China. Haudenschild said that the most important works in her collection have been shown at the Shanghai Art Museum and the National Museum of China in Beijing because she knows “how important it was for these young artists to get there.”</p>
<p>“Foreign collectors held out [the] olive branch,” according to critic Lu Leiping, in influencing the establishment of serious interest in contemporary Chinese new media art such as that in the Haudenschild Collection. (25)  Jonathan Napack wrote: “That is not to say that there is no real basis for the current foreign interest in Chinese art. This huge country, for so long off the map, is producing artists who can draw on a wellspring of images, concepts, and issues that are totally unique to China and produce works that have that elusive ‘local flavour’ increasingly rare in a globalized world.”    (26) However, an often-discussed problem is that the possibility for this “local flavour” is diminished once the artwork is brought to market.</p>
<p>A less-discussed question, whose answer remains to be seen, is, as they become part of the global art market, how are China and other “new markets” for contemporary art changing it? Will contemporary Chinese art be subsumed by the same practice seen in the Euro-American art market of limitation and marginalization of different groups, such as women and minority artists? Consistent with Western art, works by male Chinese artists generally sell for more at auction than those of women. Living Han male artists have appeared much more prominently in the exhibitions of important collections. This also fits with the Western art historical tradition of marginalizing, ignoring, and dismissing women artists within Chinese art history.  (27) Just as Chinese art, which has not reached the heights that Euro-American art does at auction, is marginalized by art world regionalism, female Chinese artists may be marginalized even more.</p>
<p>Here again, private collections occupy a unique space. Private collections, “driven as they are by passion, unencumbered by institutional impedimenta” (as Erickson was quoted as saying in the introduction to this essay), are truly private in nature, and do not fall under the type of public scrutiny that attempts to address and confront the gender- and ethnicity-based biases about an artwork’s value that is at work in public collections. In addition, through the funding of exhibitions, the establishment of art centers, and the lending of artworks, private collections may indirectly promote the marginalizing practices of the institutional and historical art worlds. On the other hand, private collections also present the possibility of freely challenging and questioning such biases, which, as attested to by Lorenz Helbling, is perhaps what Eloisa Haudenschild has attempted to do.</p>
<p>The impact an individual collector can have on the market is another question. One of the indicators by which to measure the success of an artist is his or her inclusion in important and well-known collections. It follows that the larger and more important the collection, the more influence on the market the collector has. As Napack wrote of the recent inflation, “It prices younger or novice collectors out of the market, leaving many artists vulnerable to the whims of a few deep-pocketed collectors.” (28)</p>
<p>Finally, it remains to be seen how the market’s inflation will affect the artworks themselves. Napack wrote, “The current infusion of cash into the market brings [first-rate galleries] some short-term profits, but it is also destructive in the long run. It inflates the expectations of artists and makes them even more exploitative of their galleries.”  (29) Marc Spiegler of New York magazine wrote, “Historically bad markets tend to produce better art—there’s less pressure on artists to produce and fewer temptations to sell out, and they’re dealing only with collectors and galleries willing to ride out the hard times.” (30)</p>
<p>Haudenschild stressed that ultimately what remains important to her is having the ability to support emerging artists and connect people in dialogue. She said, “The inflation of the market is problematic. When I was starting to collect, it was like these guys could really benefit from my collecting their work . . .. A lot of bad work has come to auction recently.”</p>
<p>She said, “You know, Chinese art has become this kind of cliché.” Gesturing around the garage that houses many of the collection’s significant photographs, including <strong>Yang Fudong</strong>’s <em>The First Intellectual</em> series of photos (2000), <strong>Song Tao’</strong>s <em>In Loud Crowds I Dream of Hanging Myself</em> (2002), and <strong>Lu Chunsheng</strong>’s <em>Water</em> photos (2002), she said, “I’m thankful I was able to get these pieces, but I know it’s become a little bit like a fashion show.” Expressing an increased interest in funding projects, she said, &#8220;I’m not even sure I want to be a collector anymore. But I have to make a choice that I can live with.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;<br />
<strong>Notes<br />
</strong><br />
1  Plates of much of the Chinese collection can be found in the exhibition catalogue,<em> Zooming Into Focus: Contemporary Photography and Video Art from the Haudenschild Collection</em>, Shi Yong and Laura Zhou, eds. (Shanghai: ShanghART, 2005). Images of the Haudenschild’s other holdings may be found at www.haudenschildgarage.com.</p>
<p>2  David Barboza, “In China’s New Revolution, Art Greets Capitalism,” New York Times, January 4, 2007, http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/04/arts/design/04arti.html</p>
<p>3  “Chinese art is now beginning to be aggressively collected by the Chinese themselves,” said Boriana Song, manager of the Chinese-owned Beijing Art Now Gallery. ”But now Chinese buyers are hungry for culture, and they see contemporary art as fashionable. The market is maturing, tastes are changing, and more than 60% of our clients are local Chinese.” Pallavi Aiyar, “Modern art scene grabbing investors,” Asia Times Online, April 11, 2006, http://www.atimes.com/atimes/China_Business/HD11Cb05.html .</p>
<p>4  Barboza, “In China’s New Revolution, Art Greets Capitalism.”</p>
<p>5  Marc Spiegler, “Five Theories On Why the Art Market Can’t Crash (and Why It Will Anyway),” New York, April 3, 2006,<br />
http://nymag.com/arts/art/features/16542/ .</p>
<p>6 Britta Erickson, “Zooming Into Focus, Sliding Into History,” in <em>Zooming Into Focus</em>, 14–15.</p>
<p>7 Lu Jie, “Contemporary Art in Greater China: Under Pressure, A Discussion at the 52nd Venice Biennale,” Yishu Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art (September 2007), 8–24.</p>
<p>8 Jonathan Napack, “An Art Market With Chinese Characteristics,” Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art (March 2006), 16–17.</p>
<p>9 Erickson, “Zooming Into Focus, Sliding Into History,” in <em>Zooming Into Focus</em>, 14–15.</p>
<p>10 Martina Koppel-Yang, “Compelling Images of a Distant Life, Video as Expansion of Reality,” in <em>Zooming Into Focus</em>, 71–72.</p>
<p>11 Erickson, “Zooming Into Focus, Sliding Into History,” in <em>Zooming Into Focus</em>, 14–15.</p>
<p>12 Ibid.</p>
<p>13 Information about the collection provided by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong>.</p>
<p>14 Statements by and biographical information about Mrs. Haudenschild based on a conversation at the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> on September 5, 2007, a telephone conversation on September 12, 2007, and e-mail exchange.</p>
<p>15 Lu Leiping, “When Experiment Encounters Classics,” in <em>Zooming Into Focus</em>, 19–21.</p>
<p>16 Deborh Brewster, “Investing in the art market,” Financial Times, July 13, 2007, http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/a531d0d2-3153-11dc-891f-0000779fd2ac.html .</p>
<p>17 Ibid.</p>
<p>18 Kelly Klaasmeyer, “RED HOT: Asian Art From the Chaney Family Collection,” Houston Press, September 13, 2007, http://www.houstonpress.com/2007-09-13/culture/red-hot-business/ .</p>
<p>19 Robin Pogrebin, “Volatile Markets? Art World Takes Stock,” New York Times, August 29, 2007, http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/29/arts/design/29mark.html, accessed 08/24/07 .</p>
<p>20 Barboza, “In China’s New Revolution, Art Greets Capitalism.”</p>
<p>21 Spiegler, “Five Theories On Why the Art Market Can’t Crash (and Why It Will Anyway).”</p>
<p>22 Sharon Reier, “Contemporary Art: Follow the Money—The Latest Status Investment is Showing Signs of a Bubble,” International Herald Tribune, January 27, 2007, http://w4.stern.nyu.edu/news/news.cfm?doc_id=6894 .</p>
<p>23 Napack, “An Art Market With Chinese Characteristics,” Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art (March 2006), 16–17.</p>
<p>24 Lu Jie, “Contemporary Art in Greater China: Under Pressure, A Discussion at the 52nd Venice Biennale,” Yishu Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, September/Fall 2007, 8–24.</p>
<p>25 Lu Leiping, “When Experiment Encounters Classics,” in <em>Zooming Into Focus</em>, 19–21.</p>
<p>26 Napack, “An Art Market With Chinese Characteristics,” Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art (March 2006), 16–17.</p>
<p>27  Marsha Weidner, preface to Flowering in the Shadows, Women in the History of Chinese and Japanese Painting, ed. Marsha Weidner (Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 1990), xi–xiv.</p>
<p>28  Napack, “An Art Market With Chinese Characteristics,” Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art (March 2006), 16–17.</p>
<p>29 Ibid.</p>
<p>30 Spiegler, “Five Theories on Why the Art Market Can’t Crash (and Why It Will Anyway).”</p>
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No longer for the sole purpose of documentation, photography and video in art has become a popular medium in contemporary Chinese art. Zooming into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography and Video from  ...</p></li></ul><div id="wp_thumbie_rl2"></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>hG Ten Year Reunion in China</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1406/hg-ten-year-reunion-in-china.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/1406/hg-ten-year-reunion-in-china.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Jan 2009 18:52:34 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contemporary Chinese Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Eloisa Haudenschild]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hu Jieming]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Laura Zhou]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lisa Movius]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lorenz Helbling]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lu Leiping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lui Wei]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Song Tao]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tang Maohong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Wang Youshen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Xiang Liqing]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Xu Zhen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Fudong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Zhenzhong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhao Bandi]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhou Tiehai]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhu Jia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/?p=1406</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[January 18, 2009 Shanghai, China

January 20, 2009 Beijing, China

Ten Year Reunion

Artists, critics, and curators
]]></description>
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<p>Coinciding with the anniversary of the &#8220;Art For Sale&#8221; exhibition,  the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> held a <strong>Ten Year Reunion Celebration</strong> for artists, critics, and curators on January 18, 2009 in Shanghai and on January 20, 2009 in Beijing.</p>
<p>Organized by <strong>Laura Zhou</strong> and <strong>Lorenz Helbling</strong>, some attendees included <strong>Li Xiangyang, Liu Wei, Yang Fudong, Yang Zhenzong, Shi Yong, Song Tao, Xiang Liqing, Wang Youshen, Zhu Jia, Yang Enli, Zhao Bandi, Lisa Movius, Tang Maohong, Hu Jieming, Lynn Zhang, Zhou Tiehai, Ding Yi, Helen Zhu, Chen Ya, Lu Leiping, Florence Dinar, Shaway Yeh</strong> and <strong>Xu Zhen</strong>.</p>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3622/zooming-into-focus.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/ZoomingIntro2-e1264305430730.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3622/zooming-into-focus.htm" target="_top">Zooming into Focus</a></div><p id="description">
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"This exhibition explains the importance of re-acknowledging and re-evaluating this hot spot of contemporary art. From the very beginning, contemporary Chinese photography has been closely related to the daily liv ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3551/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-san-diego-california.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/SanDiegoBanner-e1264553262979.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3551/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-san-diego-california.htm" target="_top">Zooming into Focus Exhibition - San Diego, California</a></div><p id="description">STATION I: SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA

"The exhibition presented an invaluable opportunity to bring to southern California work that would not otherwise be shown in the region. The project was groundbreaking, as it was the first exhibition to featur ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/1786/floating-images-eloisa-haudenschild-contemporary-chinese-art-by-phoebe-wong.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/CITY-1banner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/1786/floating-images-eloisa-haudenschild-contemporary-chinese-art-by-phoebe-wong.htm" target="_top">Floating Images: Eloisa Haudenschild & Contemporary Chinese Art by Phoebe Wong</a></div><p id="description">Arts &amp; Collection Series II in Asia Art Archive, July 2004
Born in Buenos Aires and currently residing in San Diego, California, Eloisa Haudenschild, has one of the largest collections for contemporary Chinese photography and video art. "Zoo ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2500/gallery-talk-with-eloisa-haudenschild-for-city-limits-exhibition.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/CSLBU-Gallery-Talk-e1264316664414.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2500/gallery-talk-with-eloisa-haudenschild-for-city-limits-exhibition.htm" target="_top">Gallery Talk with Eloisa Haudenschild for "City Limits" Exhibition</a></div><p id="description">On November 16, 2006 Eloisa Haudenschild was in conversation with CSULB Professor Todd Gray as part of the exhibition City Limits: Shanghai - Los Angeles (Nov 7 - Dec 12, 2006).

The Haudenschild Collection was the inspiration for the exhibitio ...</p></li></ul><div id="wp_thumbie_rl2"></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>works on loan: &#8220;Shanghai Kaleidoscope&#8221; Exhibition</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3616/works-on-loan-shanghai-kaleidoscope-exhibition.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3616/works-on-loan-shanghai-kaleidoscope-exhibition.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 05 May 2008 00:01:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Christopher Phillips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contemporary Chinese Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haudenschild Collection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Zhenzhong]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/?p=3616</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[May 4 - November 2, 2008

Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada

<em>Shanghai Kaleidoscope</em>

Yang Zhenzhong and Shi Yong
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Two works in the Haudenschild Collection were loaned to the Royal Ontario Museum in Canada for the exhibition <em>Shanghai Kaleidoscope</em> on view May 4 &#8211; November 2, 2008.  The works loaned were <strong>Yang Zhenzhong</strong>&#8217;s <em>Let&#8217;s Puff</em> (2002) video installation and <strong>Shi Yong</strong>&#8217;s light-box installation<em> Gravity: </em><em>Shanghai Sky </em>(2004). <a href="http://www.rom.on.ca/exhibitions/special/shanghai.php" target="_blank">Click here for more information on the exhibition</a>.</p>
<blockquote><p>This unprecedented view of one of the world’s most dynamic cities examines Shanghai as a laboratory for 21st-century urban creation. Leading artists, architects and fashion designers provide an insider&#8217;s view of the high-speed, high-density, high-rise culture that is rapidly emerging in China&#8217;s largest city.</p>
<p>What started out as a bustling seaport known for its corruption, casinos and opium trade has quickly become one of the world’s most forward-thinking cities. From the Bund to Pudong, Shanghai has transformed itself into a leading destination. Business peoples, designers, investors and tourists collide in what is a remarkable cultural and urban whirl.</p>
<p><em>Shanghai Kaleidoscope</em> presented four key aspects of the city&#8217;s vibrant culture: architecture, urban design, contemporary art, and fashion. The exhibition brought together an adventurous mix of architectural models and digital simulations; designer fashion apparel, drawings and runway videos; and paintings, photo-works and video installations by the city&#8217;s leading contemporary artists.</p></blockquote>
<p style="text-align: left;">Watch guest curator Christopher Phillips talk about the exhibition below:<br />
<object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="500" height="405" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/PGZktvIjkgw&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0&amp;border=1" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="500" height="405" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/PGZktvIjkgw&amp;hl=en_US&amp;fs=1&amp;rel=0&amp;border=1" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<div id="attachment_4225" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/chui012.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4225" title="chui012" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/chui012-300x240.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="240" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Yang Zhenzhong, Let&#39;s Puff, 2002 Video</p></div>
<div id="attachment_4226" class="wp-caption alignleft" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/shanghaisky2.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4226" title="shanghaisky" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/shanghaisky2-300x162.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="162" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Shi Yong, Gravity: Shanghai Sky, 2004</p></div>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3944/partnership-fundacion-migdalia-rubio-in-tijuana-mexico.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/BannerFMR.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3944/partnership-fundacion-migdalia-rubio-in-tijuana-mexico.htm" target="_top">partnership: Fundación Migdalia Rubio in Tijuana, Mexico</a></div><p id="description">
In early 2010, the haudenschildGarage established the Fundación Migdalia Rubio (www.fundacionmigdaliarubio.org). Its mission is to offer scholarships to economically disadvantaged elementary and high school students in Tijuana, Mexico. The haud ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3613/works-on-loan-personal-views-exhibition.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/PersonalViewsBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3613/works-on-loan-personal-views-exhibition.htm" target="_top">works on loan: "Personal Views" Exhibition</a></div><p id="description">





Three photographs and two large-scale installation pieces from the Haudenschild Collection were loaned to the San Diego Museum of Art for the exhibition  Personal Views: Regarding Private Collections in San Diego on view October 21 20 ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/116/works-on-loan-city-limits-exhibition.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/CityLimitsBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/116/works-on-loan-city-limits-exhibition.htm" target="_top">works on loan:  "City Limits" Exhibition</a></div><p id="description">

The Haudenschild Collection was the inspiration for the exhibition City Lights: Shanghai - Los Angeles at the University Art Gallery, CSULB on view November 7 - December 17, 2006. The exhibition was organized by Yeonsoo Chee and it examined c ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/363/supported-program-beginning-with-a-bang.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/bangbanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/363/supported-program-beginning-with-a-bang.htm" target="_top">supported program: "Beginning with a Bang"</a></div><p id="description">The haudenschildGarage supported the exhibition Beginning with a Bang! From Confrontation to Intimacy: Argentine Contemporary Artists 1960-2007 on view at the Americas Society, New York from September 28 - January 5, 2008.

Beginning with a Ban ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3946/supported-program-operation-photo-rescue.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/PhotoBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3946/supported-program-operation-photo-rescue.htm" target="_top">supported program: Operation Photo Rescue</a></div><p id="description">

The haudenschildGarage supports Operation Photo Rescue, a volunteer network of professional photojournalists and amateur digital photographers, graphic designers, image restoration artists and others. OPR’s mission is to repair photographs da ...</p></li></ul><div id="wp_thumbie_rl2"></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>works on loan: &#8220;Personal Views&#8221; Exhibition</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3613/works-on-loan-personal-views-exhibition.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3613/works-on-loan-personal-views-exhibition.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Oct 2006 23:19:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chen Shaoxiong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contemporary Chinese Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haudenschild Collection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Song Tao]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Yong]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[October 21, 2006 - January 7, 2007

San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego

<em> Personal Views: Regarding Private Collections in San Diego</em>

Chen Shaoxiong, Shi Yong, Song Tao, and Yang Yong
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_4107" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Chen-Shaoxiong-3.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4107" title="Chen-Shaoxiong-3" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Chen-Shaoxiong-3-300x202.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="202" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Chen Shaoxiong, Street Tianhebeilu, 1999</p></div>
<div id="attachment_4111" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/YouthDiary.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4111" title="YouthDiary" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/YouthDiary-300x133.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="133" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Yang Yong, Cruel Youth Diary - No Way Home, 2000</p></div>
<div id="attachment_4108" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Chen-Shaoxiong-4.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4108" title="Chen-Shaoxiong-4" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Chen-Shaoxiong-4-300x202.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="202" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Chen Shaoxiong, Street Motorola, 1999</p></div>
<div id="attachment_4109" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Floor.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4109" title="Floor" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Floor-300x179.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="179" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Song Tao, The Floor, 2003</p></div>
<div id="attachment_4110" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/shanghaisky1.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4110" title="shanghaisky" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/shanghaisky1-300x162.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="162" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Shi Yong, Shanghai Sky, 2003</p></div>
<p>Three photographs and two large-scale installation pieces from the Haudenschild Collection were loaned to the <strong>San Diego Museum of Art</strong> for the exhibition <em> Personal Views: Regarding Private Collections in San Diego</em> on view October 21 2006 &#8211; January 7, 2007.</p>
<p>The works loaned were <strong>Chen Shaoxiong</strong>&#8217;s <em>Street Motorola</em> (1999) and <em>Street Thianhebeilu </em>(1998), <strong>Shi Yong</strong>&#8217;s <em>Shanghai Sky</em> (2004), <strong>Song Tao</strong>&#8217;s<em> The Floor &#8211; Life is Wonderful! </em>(2003), and <strong>Yang Yong&#8217;</strong>s <em>Cruel Youth Diary &#8211; No Way Home</em> (2000).</p>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/116/works-on-loan-city-limits-exhibition.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/CityLimitsBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/116/works-on-loan-city-limits-exhibition.htm" target="_top">works on loan:  "City Limits" Exhibition</a></div><p id="description">

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		<title>Zooming into Focus Exhibition &#8211;  Beijing, China</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3556/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-beijing-china.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3556/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-beijing-china.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Nov 2005 21:58:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contemporary Chinese Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haudenschild Collection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Laura Zhou]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zooming into Focus Exhibition]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[<h3>STATION V: BEIJING, CHINA</h3>

<blockquote>"<em>Zooming into Focus</em> is the first retrospective show of Chinese contemporary photography and video ever held at the National Art Museum, Beijing.  It reveals the changes in social notions and technology in Chinese contemporary art from a different angle. The exhibition showcases the most outstanding and symbolic works from the late 1990s and 2000s which directly reflect the changing cultural and social environment and values of the Chinese people in a booming economy".  <strong>-Feng Yuan</strong>, <em>Director of the National Art Museum, of China, Beijing</em>

China's National Art Museum is currently hosting what some are calling 'its best exhibit ever.' It's a stronghold of landmark artworks from the breakout period of the early 90s, and this is a 'once in Beijing' opportunity to see them all in one place. Go at once to the art museum, but make it before the 20th of November, when the show ends and art fans sadly walk back to the distant 798-Dashanzi district. - <strong>Published in </strong><em>That's Beijing</em>

The National Art Museum of China presented the exhibition Zooming Into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography From the Haudenschild Collection. The exhibition highlighted the remarkable photography and videography works currently being created in China. The swift transformation of Chinese culture is reflected in the work of each of the participating artists, who comment on contemporary Chinese urban life with intelligence, wit, apprehension and nostalgia. 

Noted American art collectors Eloisa and Chris Haudenschild have created one of the most important collections of contemporary Chinese art in the world. Focusing on the work of experimental artists from Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai, the collection makes groundbreaking contributions to the field of international contemporary art. The National Art Museum of China, which is China's national museum for the visual arts, focuses on collecting, studying and exhibiting China's modern and contemporary works of fine art based on people's daily life. 

Shi Yong, one of the participating artists has his own opinion about getting some local exposure, "I feel very lucky that we can do this exhibition in our home country today. Actually many Chinese artists care more about domestic exhibitions then overseas ones." - <strong>Published by the Siemens Art Program for </strong><em>Culture Times Beijing</em> </blockquote>

<h5><em>Exhibition</em>November 5 - 20, 2005, National Museum of China, Beijing, China</h5>
Organized by <strong>Laura Zhou</strong> and <em>Zooming into Focus</em> catalog and installation design at the National Museum of China, Beijing  by<strong> Shi Yong</strong>.

<h5>About Laura Zhou</h5>
Laura Zhou is co-director and co-founder of ShanghART in Shanghai, China.  The gallery was initiated in 1996 and it has since grown to become one of China’s most influential contemporary art institutions. ShanghART has established itself as a leading gallery representing established figures whilst continuing to support the work of innovative younger artists. As a gallery, producer, supporter, and point of reference ShanghART contributes as a vital resource to the development of contemporary Chinese art.  Being recognized for its importance ShanghART became the initial gallery from China participating in major international art fairs like Art Basel and Fiac, Paris. Since its inauguration the gallery has established more than 70 exhibitions, and it enjoys the great respect of being among the 75 international galleries selected in Thames &#038; Hudson publication international Art Galleries that features 75 of the most acclaimed galleries from post-war to post-millennium (2005). ShanghART represents over 40 of China most talented artists working with different media ranging from painting and sculpture to video art and performance.Today ShanghART works out of three spaces in Shanghai  (Moganshan Rd and Huaihai Rd )and one space in Beijing (Cao Changdi).

<h5>About Shi Yong</h5>
Shi Yong’s work embraces modernization and the ideology of consumerism as the basis for self-imagination and creation. He has produced a series of photo-based works around the concept of the ideal Shanghai citizen. It is an ongoing multifaceted project that explores images of consumption, commodity and the development of the culture industry. One series, entitled “Made in China – Welcome to China” (1999), consists of hand-painted plaster models of a young businessman in a Mao suit, sunglasses, briefcase and waving. The image of the ideal citizen used for the statue was the outcome of an Internet project through which Shi Yong asked volunteers to vote for the ideal way of looking. The individual now transforms the identity of his or her self by following the logic of commodity market surveys. It is a composite image that Shi Yong has repeatedly used in other pieces such as “Longing For” (2000) and “You Cannot Clone It, But You Can Buy It” (2001). The iconic figure is morphed through the agency of the marketplace.

Recently, Shi Yong has focused his attention on large-scale installations and architectural models imbued with an absurd twist of humor. Most notably, his mixed media installation “Flying Q” is of a UFO built with the purpose of opening up the sky. The flying object comes with no additional explanation, but might be recognized as just another signature vision of and interventions into the imaginary world of Shi Yong. His subversive approach pokes fun at architecture based on rules and pre-established schemas. Shi Yong fabricates a colorful and ironic architectural structure that is at once a parody of serious design and its synthesis. In short, his work is an amalgam of Shanghai’s eclectic ‘anything goes’ attitude towards the built environment.

Shi Yong was born in Shanghai in 1963. He graduated from Light Industrial School, Fine Art Department. He resides and works in Shanghai. Shi Yong has exhibited widely since the early 1990’s. Recent shows include Follow Me!, Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2005), Second Guangzhou Triennale, Guangsong Museum of Art (2005), Zooming into Focus, China National Art Museum (Beijing, 2005), Felicidad Indecible, Tamayo Museum of Contemporary Art (Mexico, 2005), The Heaven, The World, ShanghART &#38;amp; H-Space (Shanghai, 2004), Shanghai Biennale (2002), Bienal de Sao Paulo (2002) and Bienal de Maia (1999). (ShanghART; Shanghai, China)]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>STATION V: BEIJING, CHINA</h3>
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<blockquote><p>&#8220;<em>Zooming into Focus</em> is the first retrospective show of Chinese contemporary photography and video ever held at the National Art Museum, Beijing.  It reveals the changes in social notions and technology in Chinese contemporary art from a different angle. The exhibition showcases the most outstanding and symbolic works from the late 1990s and 2000s which directly reflect the changing cultural and social environment and values of the Chinese people in a booming economy&#8221;.  <strong>-Feng Yuan</strong>, <em>Director of the National Art Museum, of China, Beijing</em></p>
<p>China&#8217;s National Art Museum is currently hosting what some are calling &#8216;its best exhibit ever.&#8217; It&#8217;s a stronghold of landmark artworks from the breakout period of the early 90s, and this is a &#8216;once in Beijing&#8217; opportunity to see them all in one place. Go at once to the art museum, but make it before the 20th of November, when the show ends and art fans sadly walk back to the distant 798-Dashanzi district. &#8211; <strong>Published in </strong><em>That&#8217;s Beijing</em></p>
<p>The National Art Museum of China presented the exhibition Zooming Into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography From the Haudenschild Collection. The exhibition highlighted the remarkable photography and videography works currently being created in China. The swift transformation of Chinese culture is reflected in the work of each of the participating artists, who comment on contemporary Chinese urban life with intelligence, wit, apprehension and nostalgia.</p>
<p>Noted American art collectors Eloisa and Chris Haudenschild have created one of the most important collections of contemporary Chinese art in the world. Focusing on the work of experimental artists from Beijing, Guangzhou and Shanghai, the collection makes groundbreaking contributions to the field of international contemporary art. The National Art Museum of China, which is China&#8217;s national museum for the visual arts, focuses on collecting, studying and exhibiting China&#8217;s modern and contemporary works of fine art based on people&#8217;s daily life.</p>
<p>Shi Yong, one of the participating artists has his own opinion about getting some local exposure, &#8220;I feel very lucky that we can do this exhibition in our home country today. Actually many Chinese artists care more about domestic exhibitions then overseas ones.&#8221; &#8211; <strong>Published by the Siemens Art Program for </strong><em>Culture Times Beijing</em></p></blockquote>
<h5><em>Exhibition</em><br />
November 5 &#8211; 20, 2005, National Museum of China, Beijing, China</h5>
<p>Organized by <strong>Laura Zhou</strong> and <em>Zooming into Focus</em> catalog and installation design at the National Museum of China, Beijing by <strong>Shi Yong</strong>.</p>
<h5>About Laura Zhou</h5>
<p>Laura Zhou is co-director and co-founder of ShanghART in Shanghai, China.  The gallery was initiated in 1996 and it has since grown to become one of China’s most influential contemporary art institutions. ShanghART has established itself as a leading gallery representing established figures whilst continuing to support the work of innovative younger artists. As a gallery, producer, supporter, and point of reference ShanghART contributes as a vital resource to the development of contemporary Chinese art.  Being recognized for its importance ShanghART became the initial gallery from China participating in major international art fairs like Art Basel and Fiac, Paris. Since its inauguration the gallery has established more than 70 exhibitions, and it enjoys the great respect of being among the 75 international galleries selected in Thames &amp; Hudson publication international Art Galleries that features 75 of the most acclaimed galleries from post-war to post-millennium (2005). ShanghART represents over 40 of China most talented artists working with different media ranging from painting and sculpture to video art and performance.Today ShanghART works out of three spaces in Shanghai  (Moganshan Rd and Huaihai Rd )and one space in Beijing (Cao Changdi).</p>
<h5>About Shi Yong</h5>
<p>Shi Yong’s work embraces modernization and the ideology of consumerism as the basis for self-imagination and creation. He has produced a series of photo-based works around the concept of the ideal Shanghai citizen. It is an ongoing multifaceted project that explores images of consumption, commodity and the development of the culture industry. One series, entitled “Made in China – Welcome to China” (1999), consists of hand-painted plaster models of a young businessman in a Mao suit, sunglasses, briefcase and waving. The image of the ideal citizen used for the statue was the outcome of an Internet project through which Shi Yong asked volunteers to vote for the ideal way of looking. The individual now transforms the identity of his or her self by following the logic of commodity market surveys. It is a composite image that Shi Yong has repeatedly used in other pieces such as “Longing For” (2000) and “You Cannot Clone It, But You Can Buy It” (2001). The iconic figure is morphed through the agency of the marketplace.</p>
<p>Recently, Shi Yong has focused his attention on large-scale installations and architectural models imbued with an absurd twist of humor. Most notably, his mixed media installation “Flying Q” is of a UFO built with the purpose of opening up the sky. The flying object comes with no additional explanation, but might be recognized as just another signature vision of and interventions into the imaginary world of Shi Yong. His subversive approach pokes fun at architecture based on rules and pre-established schemas. Shi Yong fabricates a colorful and ironic architectural structure that is at once a parody of serious design and its synthesis. In short, his work is an amalgam of Shanghai’s eclectic ‘anything goes’ attitude towards the built environment.</p>
<p>Shi Yong was born in Shanghai in 1963. He graduated from Light Industrial School, Fine Art Department. He resides and works in Shanghai. Shi Yong has exhibited widely since the early 1990’s. Recent shows include Follow Me!, Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2005), Second Guangzhou Triennale, Guangsong Museum of Art (2005), Zooming into Focus, China National Art Museum (Beijing, 2005), Felicidad Indecible, Tamayo Museum of Contemporary Art (Mexico, 2005), The Heaven, The World, ShanghART &amp;amp; H-Space (Shanghai, 2004), Shanghai Biennale (2002), Bienal de Sao Paulo (2002) and Bienal de Maia (1999). (ShanghART; Shanghai, China)</p>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2422/artist-in-residence-shi-yong.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Shi-Yong-021.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2422/artist-in-residence-shi-yong.htm" target="_top">artist-in-residence: Shi Yong</a></div><p id="description">
Chinese artist Shi Yong was an Artist-In-Residence at the haudenschildGarage from October 22 to November 12, 2003.  Shi Yong was invited as part of the exhibition Zooming into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography &amp; Video from the Haudens ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3008/hg-commission-shi-yongs-super-angel.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/ShiYongBanner1.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3008/hg-commission-shi-yongs-super-angel.htm" target="_top">hG commission: Shi Yong's "Super Angel"</a></div><p id="description">
The premiere performance of Super Angel was commissioned by the haudenschildGarage and completed during Shi Yong's residency at the haudenschildGarage from October 22 - November 12, 2003.  This piece was produced in collaboration with Tina Yape ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3710/collected-reviews-of-zooming-into-focus-from-beijing-and-shanghai.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/misc-reviews-of-zooming.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3710/collected-reviews-of-zooming-into-focus-from-beijing-and-shanghai.htm" target="_top">Collected Reviews of Zooming into Focus from Beijing and Shanghai</a></div><p id="description">That's Beijing, 2005

China's National Art Museum is currently hosting what some are calling 'its best exhibit ever.' The modern video and photography arts of contemporary China converge in this enormous collection, belonging to Mr. &amp; Mrs.  ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4430/bird-head-and-shi-yong-at-the-54th-venice-art-biennale.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/birdheadbanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/4430/bird-head-and-shi-yong-at-the-54th-venice-art-biennale.htm" target="_top">Bird Head and Shi Yong at the 54th Venice Art Biennale</a></div><p id="description">ShanghART Gallery is pleased to announce the participation of Bird Head (Ji Weiyu &amp; Song Tao) in the upcoming 54th Venice Art Biennale ILLUMInations, opening June 4 - November 27, 2011 and Shi Yong in Glasstress 2011 at Palazzo Cavalli Franch ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2426/performance-shi-yongs-premiere-of-super-angel.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/Super-AngelBanner2.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/2426/performance-shi-yongs-premiere-of-super-angel.htm" target="_top">performance: Shi Yong's Premiere of "Super Angel"</a></div><p id="description">
On November 8, 2003 Chinese artist Shi Yong held the premiere performance of Super Angel at San Diego State University. He invited people to be part of the development of his website and performance by participating in a conversation with him t ...</p></li></ul><div id="wp_thumbie_rl2"></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>works on loan: &#8220;Follow Me!&#8221; Exhibition</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3618/works-on-loan-follow-me-exhibition.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3618/works-on-loan-follow-me-exhibition.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 09 Jul 2005 00:21:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Cao Fei]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Chen Shaoxiong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Contemporary Chinese Art]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Haudenschild Collection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mami Kataoka]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Weng Fen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Xu Zhen]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Fudong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Yang Zhenzhong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zheng Guogu]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zhou Tiehai]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/?p=3618</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[July 2 - September 4, 2005

Mori Art Museum, Tokyo, Japan

<em>Follow Me! Contemporary Chinese Art at the Threshold of the Millennium</em>

Shi Yong
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="attachment_4099" class="wp-caption alignright" style="width: 310px"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/shanghaisky.jpg"><img class="size-medium wp-image-4099" title="shanghaisky" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/shanghaisky-300x162.jpg" alt="" width="300" height="162" /></a><p class="wp-caption-text">Shi Yong, Gravity: Shanghai Night Sky, 2004</p></div>
<p><strong>Shi Yong</strong>&#8217;s light box installation <em>Gravity: </em><em>Shanghai Night Sky </em>(2004) from the Haudenschild Collection was loaned to the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo for the exhibition <em>Follow Me! Contemporary Chinese Art at the Threshold of the Millennium</em> on view July 2 &#8211; September 4, 2005. Curator <strong>Mami Kataoka</strong> invited artists <strong>Cao Fei, Chen Shaoxiong, Chen Wenbo, Liu Zheng, Lu Hao, Ou Ning, Shao Yinong / Mu Chen, Shi Yong, Wang Qingsong, Weng Fen, Xu Zhen, Yang Fudong, Yang Zhenzhong, The Yangjiang Group (Zheng Guogu, Chen Zaiyan, Sun Qinglin), Yin Xiuzhen</strong> and <strong>Zhou Tiehai</strong>.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.mori.art.museum/english/contents/followme/index.html" target="_blank">Click here for more information about the exhibition.</a></p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;<em>Follow Me! Chinese Contemporary Art at the Threshold of the New Millennium </em>introduces over forty works by nineteen artists of this new generation. The title of the exhibition is taken from Wang Qingsong&#8217;s photo-tableau &#8220;Follow Me,&#8221; included in the show, which shows the artist as a teacher seated in front of a blackboard covered in Chinese and English writing on which the logos of famous American and European brands can be seen &#8211; a sideways comments perhaps on China&#8217;s recent wave of privatizations and opening up to foreign markets. But the words at the center of the board &#8211; &#8220;Let China walks towards the world! Let the world learns about China!&#8221; &#8211; suggest that they should not slavishly follow the developed world. In fact, the artist seems to be asking who, in the future, will be doing the leading. In confronting the many faces of the new China there can no longer be any single point of view or message in the art. One thing is sure though, the influence of this country&#8217;s artists is certain to grow in the future.</p>
<p>Contemporary China is characterized by an incredible dynamism. Things seem to be transformed everyday, fuelled by astonishing economic growth, frantic urban development and the preparations for the 2008 Olympics. Of course these changes are reflected in art. Throughout the 1990s Chinese artists slowly emerged into the international art world and were invited to take part in numerous exhibitions across the world. Now, at the threshold of the new millennium, interest in Chinese contemporary art is peaking again, as a new generation of artists &#8211; born in the late 1960s and 1970s &#8211; appears on the scene.</p>
<p>This new generation presents us with an accurate and complex picture of a culture in transition. They take as their subject matter the country&#8217;s disappearing traditional landscape, its new urbanism and rapidly changing social values. They are also concerned with the ways in which Chinese people are adapting their lifestyles to contemporary realities, freeing themselves from traditional stereotypes while actively utilizing new technologies.&#8221; &#8211; <strong>Mami Kataoka</strong></p></blockquote>
<h5>About Mami Kataoka</h5>
<p>Mami Kataoka is currently the senior curator at the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo and is the international curator at Hayward Gallery, London, where earlier in 2009 she presented the exhibition <em>Laughing in a Foreign Language</em>, exploring the role of humor in contemporary art practice worldwide. She has co-curated the exhibitions <em>Tokyo-Berlin / Berlin-Tokyo</em> (2006) in collaboration with the Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin; <em>New Territories</em> (2005) at ARCO Madrid.  From 1997-2002 she was chief curator at Tokyo Opera City Art Gallery. In 2001 she co-curated &#8220;<em>My Home is Yours / Your Home is Mine&#8221;</em> with Hou Hanru and Jerome Sans. In 2002 she worked with the Barbican Art Gallery in London to produce &#8220;<em>JAM: Tokyo-London</em>&#8221; which included the work of over forty artists, fashion and graphic designers, photographers, musicians, and performers. In the same year Kataoka was one of nine curators to develop the exhibition &#8220;<em>Under Construction: New Dimensions of Asian Art</em>&#8220;. She was also the selector, with Hou Hanru, of the Asian galleries that participated in the 2004 ARCO held in Madrid. More recently she has worked on projects with artists: Rirkrit Tiravanija, Santiago Cucullu, Ozawa Tsuyoshi and Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba.</p>
<div id="wp_thumbie" style= "border: 0pt none ; margin: 0pt; padding: 0pt; clear: both;"><div id="wp_thumbie_rl1">Related Content</div><ul class="wp_thumbie_ul_list" style="list-style-type: none;"><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3613/works-on-loan-personal-views-exhibition.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/PersonalViewsBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3613/works-on-loan-personal-views-exhibition.htm" target="_top">works on loan: "Personal Views" Exhibition</a></div><p id="description">





Three photographs and two large-scale installation pieces from the Haudenschild Collection were loaned to the San Diego Museum of Art for the exhibition  Personal Views: Regarding Private Collections in San Diego on view October 21 20 ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3622/zooming-into-focus.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/ZoomingIntro2-e1264305430730.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3622/zooming-into-focus.htm" target="_top">Zooming into Focus</a></div><p id="description">
Marking many important milestones, Zooming into Focus: Chinese Contemporary Photography and Video from the Haudenschild Collection (2003 - 2005) was the first exhibition of its kind in San Diego and Singapore and the first contemporary Chinese  ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/203/garage-talk-asian-art-now.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/AsianArtNowBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/203/garage-talk-asian-art-now.htm" target="_top">garage talk: Asian Art Now</a></div><p id="description">On February 3, 2005 the haudenschildGarage presented the panel Asian Art Now in collaboration with the Visual Arts Department of UCSD. Organized by Eloisa Haudenschild with Steve Fagin. Mami Kataoka (Senior Curator, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo &amp; I ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3616/works-on-loan-shanghai-kaleidoscope-exhibition.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/ShangKalBanner.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3616/works-on-loan-shanghai-kaleidoscope-exhibition.htm" target="_top">works on loan: "Shanghai Kaleidoscope" Exhibition</a></div><p id="description">Two works in the Haudenschild Collection were loaned to the Royal Ontario Museum in Canada for the exhibition Shanghai Kaleidoscope on view May 4 - November 2, 2008.  The works loaned were Yang Zhenzhong's Let's Puff (2002) video installation and ...</p></li><li id="wp_thumbie_li" style="height:74px;"><div id="wp_thumbie_image"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3553/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-shanghai-china.htm" target="_top"><img id="wp_thumbie_thumb" src="http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/plugins/wp-thumbie/timthumb.php?src=http://haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/wp-content/uploads/martina.jpg&w=70&h=70&zc=1"/></a></div><div id="wp_thumbie_title"><a href="http://haudenschildgarage.com/3553/zooming-into-focus-exhibition-shanghai-china.htm" target="_top">Zooming into Focus Exhibition - Shanghai, China</a></div><p id="description">STATION II: SHANGHAI, CHINA


"This exhibition explains the importance of re-acknowledging and re-evaluating this hot spot of contemporary art. From the very beginning, contemporary Chinese photography has been closely related to the daily liv ...</p></li></ul><div id="wp_thumbie_rl2"></div></div>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>hG commission: Shi Yong&#8217;s &#8220;Super Angel&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3008/hg-commission-shi-yongs-super-angel.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/3008/hg-commission-shi-yongs-super-angel.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 09 Nov 2003 00:42:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Programs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SDSU]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Super Angel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zooming into Focus Exhibition]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.haudenschildgarage.com/hgwp/?p=3008</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[October 22 – November 12, 2003 at <em>h</em><strong>G</strong>

Interactive website and performance

Artist; Shanghai, China

]]></description>
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<p>The premiere performance of <em>Super Angel</em> was commissioned by the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> and completed during <strong>Shi Yong</strong>&#8217;s residency at the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage</strong> from October 22 &#8211; November 12, 2003.  This piece was produced in collaboration with <strong>Tina Yapelli </strong>of the University Art Gallery and the students of San Diego State University.</p>
<p>He encouraged the public to be part of the development of his website and performance by participating in a conversation with him through his interactive website. <a href="http://www.shanghart.com/shiyong" target="_blank">Click here to visit his Super Angel website</a></p>
<p>Shi Yong was invited as part of the exhibition <em>Zooming into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography &amp; Video from the Haudenschild Collection. <span style="font-style: normal;">He was responsible for designing the <em>Zooming into Focus</em> catalog and the installation design of <em>Zooming into Focus</em> at the National Art Museum of China, Beijing.</span></em></p>
<h5>About Shi Yong</h5>
<p>Shi Yong’s work embraces modernization and the ideology of consumerism as the basis for self-imagination and creation. He has produced a series of photo-based works around the concept of the ideal Shanghai citizen. It is an ongoing multifaceted project that explores images of consumption, commodity and the development of the culture industry. One series, entitled “Made in China – Welcome to China” (1999), consists of hand-painted plaster models of a young businessman in a Mao suit, sunglasses, briefcase and waving. The image of the ideal citizen used for the statue was the outcome of an Internet project through which Shi Yong asked volunteers to vote for the ideal way of looking. The individual now transforms the identity of his or her self by following the logic of commodity market surveys. It is a composite image that Shi Yong has repeatedly used in other pieces such as “Longing For” (2000) and “You Cannot Clone It, But You Can Buy It” (2001). The iconic figure is morphed through the agency of the marketplace.</p>
<p>Recently, Shi Yong has focused his attention on large-scale installations and architectural models imbued with an absurd twist of humor. Most notably, his mixed media installation “Flying Q” is of a UFO built with the purpose of opening up the sky. The flying object comes with no additional explanation, but might be recognized as just another signature vision of and interventions into the imaginary world of Shi Yong. His subversive approach pokes fun at architecture based on rules and pre-established schemas. Shi Yong fabricates a colorful and ironic architectural structure that is at once a parody of serious design and its synthesis. In short, his work is an amalgam of Shanghai’s eclectic ‘anything goes’ attitude towards the built environment.</p>
<p>Shi Yong was born in Shanghai in 1963. He graduated from Light Industrial School, Fine Art Department. He resides and works in Shanghai. Shi Yong has exhibited widely since the early 1990’s. Recent shows include Follow Me!, Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2005), Second Guangzhou Triennale, Guangsong Museum of Art (2005), Zooming into Focus, China National Art Museum (Beijing, 2005), Felicidad Indecible, Tamayo Museum of Contemporary Art (Mexico, 2005), The Heaven, The World, ShanghART &amp; H-Space (Shanghai, 2004), Shanghai Biennale (2002), Bienal de Sao Paulo (2002) and Bienal de Maia (1999). (ShanghART; Shanghai, China)</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Recently, nearly in one year, the idea of my work has been mainly concerned with the &#8220;public image&#8221; which exists in the medium of space. Exactly, opposite to the western medium, the &#8220;Public Image&#8221; is ironical. It reflects another cultural reality in the dialogue and interchange between the western and the non-western: the so-called multiculturalism defined by the western culture seemingly tells you that the line between the ethnocentric culture and the marginal culture is being eliminated. At the same time, the name of &#8220;discrepancy&#8221; a new taxonomy of cultures is placing you cleverly in a special symbolic window display for the purpose of distinguishing. Then, you are forced to come back to the marginal position one more time. The difference is only that the previous line with the air of the colonialism is now replaced by that of the post colonialism. Therefore, in the cultural reality controlled factually by the western power, the so-called non-western character who is redifferentiated and redifined has to take the &#8220;Public Image&#8221; in line with the defined standard as an effective and safe extrance. In that case, you can keep a &#8220;legitimate&#8221; position in the stage of so-called ethnocentric culture. This is the reason why I take the &#8220;Public Image&#8221; as the subject of my works.&#8221; &#8211; <strong>Shi Yong</strong></p></blockquote>
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		<title>performance: Shi Yong&#8217;s Premiere of &#8220;Super Angel&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://haudenschildgarage.com/2426/performance-shi-yongs-premiere-of-super-angel.htm</link>
		<comments>http://haudenschildgarage.com/2426/performance-shi-yongs-premiere-of-super-angel.htm#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 08 Nov 2003 23:48:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Monica Jovanovich</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Events]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Hou Hanru]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[SDSU]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shi Yong]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Super Angel]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Zooming into Focus Exhibition]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[November 8, 2003

San Diego State University

Performance

Artist; Shanghai, China
]]></description>
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<p>On November 8, 2003 Chinese artist <strong>Shi Yong</strong> held the premiere performance of <em>Super Angel</em> at San Diego State University. He invited people to be part of the development of his website and performance by participating in a conversation with him through his interactive website. <a href="http://www.shanghart.com/shiyong/" target="_blank">Click here to visit his Super Angel website</a>. <em>Super Angel</em> was produced in collaboration with Tina Yapelli of the University Art Gallery and the students of San Diego State University.</p>
<p><strong>Hou Hanru</strong> gave his keynote lecture, <em>Chinese Artists (Digitally) Facing the Globalizing World</em>, prior to the performance.</p>
<p>Shi Yong was an Artist-In-Residence from October 22 &#8211; November 12, 2003  at the <em>haudenschild</em><strong>Garage </strong>and was invited as part of the exhibition <em>Zooming into Focus: Contemporary Chinese Photography &amp; Video from the Haudenschild Collection. <span style="font-style: normal;">He was responsible for designing the <em>Zooming into Focus</em> catalog and the installation design of <em>Zooming into Focus</em> at the National Art Museum of China, Beijing.</span></em></p>
<h5>About Shi Yong</h5>
<p>Shi Yong’s work embraces modernization and the ideology of consumerism as the basis for self-imagination and creation. He has produced a series of photo-based works around the concept of the ideal Shanghai citizen. It is an ongoing multifaceted project that explores images of consumption, commodity and the development of the culture industry. One series, entitled “Made in China – Welcome to China” (1999), consists of hand-painted plaster models of a young businessman in a Mao suit, sunglasses, briefcase and waving. The image of the ideal citizen used for the statue was the outcome of an Internet project through which Shi Yong asked volunteers to vote for the ideal way of looking. The individual now transforms the identity of his or her self by following the logic of commodity market surveys. It is a composite image that Shi Yong has repeatedly used in other pieces such as “Longing For” (2000) and “You Cannot Clone It, But You Can Buy It” (2001). The iconic figure is morphed through the agency of the marketplace.</p>
<p>Recently, Shi Yong has focused his attention on large-scale installations and architectural models imbued with an absurd twist of humor. Most notably, his mixed media installation “Flying Q” is of a UFO built with the purpose of opening up the sky. The flying object comes with no additional explanation, but might be recognized as just another signature vision of and interventions into the imaginary world of Shi Yong. His subversive approach pokes fun at architecture based on rules and pre-established schemas. Shi Yong fabricates a colorful and ironic architectural structure that is at once a parody of serious design and its synthesis. In short, his work is an amalgam of Shanghai’s eclectic ‘anything goes’ attitude towards the built environment.</p>
<p>Shi Yong was born in Shanghai in 1963. He graduated from Light Industrial School, Fine Art Department. He resides and works in Shanghai. Shi Yong has exhibited widely since the early 1990’s. Recent shows include Follow Me!, Mori Art Museum (Tokyo, 2005), Second Guangzhou Triennale, Guangsong Museum of Art (2005), Zooming into Focus, China National Art Museum (Beijing, 2005), Felicidad Indecible, Tamayo Museum of Contemporary Art (Mexico, 2005), The Heaven, The World, ShanghART &amp; H-Space (Shanghai, 2004), Shanghai Biennale (2002), Bienal de Sao Paulo (2002) and Bienal de Maia (1999). (ShanghART; Shanghai, China)</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Recently, nearly in one year, the idea of my work has been mainly concerned with the &#8220;public image&#8221; which exists in the medium of space. Exactly, opposite to the western medium, the &#8220;Public Image&#8221; is ironical. It reflects another cultural reality in the dialogue and interchange between the western and the non-western: the so-called multiculturalism defined by the western culture seemingly tells you that the line between the ethnocentric culture and the marginal culture is being eliminated. At the same time, the name of &#8220;discrepancy&#8221; a new taxonomy of cultures is placing you cleverly in a special symbolic window display for the purpose of distinguishing. Then, you are forced to come back to the marginal position one more time. The difference is only that the previous line with the air of the colonialism is now replaced by that of the post colonialism. Therefore, in the cultural reality controlled factually by the western power, the so-called non-western character who is redifferentiated and redifined has to take the &#8220;Public Image&#8221; in line with the defined standard as an effective and safe extrance. In that case, you can keep a &#8220;legitimate&#8221; position in the stage of so-called ethnocentric culture. This is the reason why I take the &#8220;Public Image&#8221; as the subject of my works.&#8221; &#8211; <strong>Shi Yong</strong></p></blockquote>
<h5>Hou Hanru</h5>
<p>Hou Hanru is Director of Exhibitions and Public Programs and Chair of the Exhibitions and Museum Studies program at SFAI. He was also the moderator for the 2004 symposium in Hangzhou, China<em> Envisioning the Future of Contemporary Art From Different Glocal Positions</em> organized in collaboration with the exhibition <em>Zooming into Focus: Photography and Video from the Haudenschild Collection</em>. A prolific writer and curator, Hou received both his undergraduate and graduate degrees from the Central Institute of Fine Arts in Beijing, where he was trained in art history, with additional work in painting, performance, installation, and architectural research. He is a consultant for several cultural institutions internationally including the Global Advisory Committee of the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and the Contemporary Art Museum in Kumamoto, Japan. Described as a significant international voice on cultural difference, Hou is the French correspondent for Flash Art International and a regular contributor to several other journals on contemporary art including Frieze, Art Monthly, Third Text, Art and Asia Pacific, Domus, Atlantica, Texte Zur Kunst, and Tema Celeste. Most recently, Hou was appointed Curator of the 10th International Istanbul Biennial, which will take place from September to November 2007. Other recent curatorial projects include the second Guangzhou Triennale where he co-curated Beyond: An Extraordinary Space of Experimentation for Modernization; Go Inside, the 3rd Tirana Biennale (Tirana, Albania, 2005); Out of Sight, organized by the De Appel Foundation (Amsterdam, Netherlands, 2005); Nuit Blanche 2004 (Paris, 2004); and A L&#8217;Ouest Du Sud De L&#8217;Est / A L&#8217;Est Du Sud De L&#8217;Ouest (Villa Arson, Nice, 2004). Hou is one of the first curators and thinkers to examine postmodern issues of nomadic identity, hybridity, globalized mobility, what he calls “in-betweeness,” and artists living in the diaspora.</p>
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