Friday, May 19, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Facing Vulture Peak: Pivoting Perspectives of Lady Vaidehi and a Visual Culture of the Pure Land
Anne Feng
Department of Art History, University of Chicago, Ph.D. candidate
Friday, May 19, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Facing Vulture Peak: Pivoting Perspectives of Lady Vaidehi and a Visual Culture of the Pure Land
Anne Feng
Department of Art History, University of Chicago, Ph.D. candidate
Friday, May 12, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
洞天:解读汉代墓葬艺术中的时空模式与象征程序
The Grotto-heaven: Interpreting the Time and space pattern and Symbolic Structure in the Art of Han Tombs
秦臻 QIN Zhen
四川美术学院 教授, Professor, Sichuan Fine Arts Institute
*This talk will be delivered in Chinese.
成都博物院藏 成都百花潭东汉墓葬出土仙山座
“洞天”与西王母、仙人六博、孝子贤臣等图像组合所描绘的仙山图像,自公元一世纪开始,逐渐取代了以鬼魅魍魉、川泽山林为主的传统山水模式。本课题以四川成都、雅安等地出土仙山座为主要研究对象,探讨“洞天”图像是如何通过图像来形成暗示、象征,表现作为另一个世界的入口或通道,并进而丰富和改变了汉代画像系统的空间关系。这种以洞穴,入口所暗示、引入的内在空间即是可供迈入不死仙境的生命转换场所。汉代的丧葬艺术通过对这种隐秘空间的丰富和建构,将现世与来世连接起来,呈现出一种具有时间性的空间表现模式和象征程序。
Friday, May 12, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
Thursday, April 27, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Figuration and Dissent
Namiko Kunimoto
Assistant Professor in the Department of History of Art, Ohio State University
Katsura Yuki, Gonbe and Crow, 1966
This presentation examines the work of Katsura Yuki (1913-1991), a Tokyo-based painter and assemblage artist. Katsura enacted political resistance by representing contentious issues such as self-sacrifice in times of war, the United States Castle Bravo nuclear test, the representation of gay lovers, and the status of women in Japan. This presentation will focus specifically on her paintings from the 1930s-1960s, as well as her illustrations of the James Baldwin novel, Another Country, that were featured in the Asahi Journal in the 1960s. Katsura’s body of work evaded the overdetermined masculine heroics of abstract expressionism and action art that had taken Japan by storm in the postwar period, forging an innovative mode of expression that was whimsical and strange in its tone, but nonetheless bore a potent political thrust.
By experimenting with the visibility and invisibility of the body, I argue Katsura enacted what Jacques Rancière terms political “dissensus.” Rancière sees genuine art and politics as those that create new relations between the visible and the invisible, liberating bodies from their assigned places and breaking with the ‘natural’ order of the sensible. Similarly, by experimenting with the visibility of the Othered body Katsura reoriented aesthetic-political sensibility and opened up a space for a wider discourse on gender and race in Japan.
Thursday, April 27, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
Friday, April 14, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
从细节发现历史——中国早期绘画鉴定与研究 Discovering History from Details – Research and Connoisseurship on Early Chinese Paintings
余辉 YU Hui
故宫博物院研究员, 国家文物鉴定委员会委员 Director of Research, Palace Museum in Beijing
*Please notice the special time of the talk, also notice that the presentation will be given in Chinese
五代南唐周文矩《重屏会棋图》卷(北宋摹本,故宫博物院藏)
本讲座以讲座人在近三十年间研究古代宫廷绘画的个案中发现的与古代历史的有着密切关联的绘画细节,如涉及政治(主要是王位继承)、军事、社会风俗、民族融合等许多事例,古画中的历史记录往往深藏其中,使远离古代社会的我们难以发现,但是,在古画中发现历史是有规律可以探寻的,如有些宫廷绘画中的年款,常常与那个时段发生的特殊事件有着密切的关系,尤其是帝王书画和表现帝王生活的绘画则更加鲜明。讲座人将以数十个绘画事例与大家共同探讨。演讲者还将同时揭开南唐周文矩《重屏会棋图》卷(宋摹本)中的历史密码。
Friday, April 14, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
Monday, April.3, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
云冈石窟与女性“在场” The Female Presence in the Yungang Grottoes
董虹霞 Hongxia Dong
Associate Professor, Taiyuan University of Technology
*Please notice the special time of the talk, also notice that the presentation will be given in Chinese
二佛并坐像 云冈石窟第九窟前室北壁上层西龛
云冈石窟作为中国最早的由少数民族政权开凿的皇家佛教石窟,自1902年被日本建筑史学家伊东忠太重新发现以来,得到了来自日本、 欧美和国内学者的关注与研究,他们的努力极大地推动了云冈石窟价值的彰显。其中,日本学者Z. Tsukamoto提出关于北魏石窟赞助人的研究可以分为三个层次:(1)皇家和拓跋氏贵族的赞助;(2)僧侣的赞助;(3)信众的赞助。而来自英属哥伦比亚大学( The University of British Columbia)的学者 James O. Caswell 补充建议道:每一层次中还应该分出男女。 James在这里暗示出了“女性”在其中的特别与重要性。“云冈石窟与女性在场”这一课题便以“想象性在场”和“推论性在场”两种方式,带有实验性地探讨了北魏“女性”在云冈石窟早期、中期、中晚期的“在场”情形,其中涉及到皇太后、太皇太后这类强势女主,也有清信女、比丘尼、贵族妻等民间女性。希望以此课题丰富我们对于云冈石窟的认识与想象。
Monday, April.3, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
Friday, March.10, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Action and Enaction: Cities, Tombs, Paintings
Jonathan Hay
Ailsa Mellon Bruce Professor of Fine Arts, the Institute of Fine Arts, NYU
Please notice that this workshop will be conducted in the format of a seminar with a 10-15 minute introduction by Prof. Hay. Please read following three readings and prepare for some questions in advance.
The three articles are:
“The Reproductive Hand” (2013)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzfO9iB-iLhAOHpZcWJjYXV5a1E/view
“Seeing through Dead Eyes: How Early Tang Tombs Staged the afterlife”(2014)
https://drive.google.com/file/u/1/d/0BzfO9iB-iLhAY2NpcVBreGUtZzA/view?usp=drive_web
“Green Beijing: Ecologies of Movement in the New Capital C. 1450.” (2016)
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BzfO9iB-iLhAWHVqaWdxSi1USVk/view
“I have selected for discussion three texts on different aspects of Chinese art, none of which is long and two of which are quite short. The longest, the research article “Seeing through Dead Eyes,” proposes a way of approaching tomb art that would supplement Wu Hung’s highly developed methods. The article explores the hypothesis that tomb building and tomb decoration at the beginning of the eighth century C.E. can be understood partly as a technology for the creation of afterlife choices by the soul of the deceased. The technology transformed the enclosed architectural space of the tomb into a vast residential compound with a multitude of possibilities of movement that extended even to visits from one afterlife residence to another. At the workshop, I will develop a point not discussed in the article itself: that this technology reflected an aristocratic view of life as the possibility of choices, in opposition to the absence of choice in imprisonment, servitude, and slavery. The theoretical essay, “The Reproductive Hand,” develops the theme of technology along different lines in order to understand better the practice of replication of paintings, especially during the period prior to the fifteenth century. I argue that the production of replicas is best understood as a cyborg technology in which the human practitioner effectively made himself into a machine. “Seeing through Dead Eyes” makes the theoretical argument that the concept of representation, which has long dominated art historical interpretation, is incomplete. When the central question of art history shifts from “What does the artwork mean?” to “How does the artwork make sense?” (alternatively, “What does the artwork do?”), it becomes necessary to balance representation with a separate concept of enactment. “The Reproductive Hand” extends the concept of enactment to include reenactment.
In a separate direction, the article “Green Beijing” sketches out a method for analyzing a city (Beijing ca. 1450) in art historical terms. More obviously than a tomb or a painting, a city is in constant movement, reconfiguring itself from moment to moment. And to a greater degree than a tomb or a painting, a city coordinates multiple elements. How can one do justice to this movement and multiplicity? The article argues for the usefulness of two interelated concepts, situation and scape, both of which have a counterpart in the Chinese concept of shi. As I use the terms in this article and elsewhere, situation is the interpretative counterpart to the epistemological concept of scape.
My practice as an art historian has been to multiply theoretical approaches and areas of inquiry without worrying too much about intersections and convergences. Nonetheless these occur. One could discuss the early eighth-century tombs or the pre-fifteenth century paintings in terms of situation and scape, just as one could discuss fifteenth-century Beijing in terms of technologies of enactment and reenactment. If you find it useful, we can do so during the workshop.”
Friday, March.10, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Friday, March.3, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
The Romance of Lychee and Mirror: Teochew Opera Film and the Question of Remediation
Panpan Yang
Ph.D. Student, Department of Cinema and Media Studies & Department of East Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago
Judith Zeitlin (William R Kenan, Jr. Professor, East Asian Languages & Civilizations) will serve as discussant.
The Romance of Lychee and Mirror (荔鏡記/陳三五娘, dir. Zhu Shilin, 1962)
In the late 1950s, as a response to China’s national opera reform movement, Teochew opera—a minor opera originating in the Teochew region in Guangdong Province, China—abolished its “all children cast” tradition and tapped into the territory of opera film. In the early 1960s, a robust body of Teochew opera films, co-produced by Hong Kong and China, attained unprecedented popularity in southern China, Hong Kong, and Southeast Asia. This paper traces the fascinating but unknown history of Teochew opera film, exploring the crafting of a distinct opera film genre through melding opera with the cinematic, its translocal reception, and the question of remediation.
The emergence of Teochew opera film can be read as an intense process of remediation between cinema and opera. Is the process of remediation a tension-filled competition between different media or a two-way fertilization? Can the technique of elliptical editing be creatively used to avoid the incongruities between suppositional operatic performance and realistic film sets and props? How does Teochew opera film translate a cinematic and an operatic organization of time? Is Southeast Asian audiences’ repeated viewing of Teochew opera film secretly linked to nostalgia? These questions invite a renewed understanding of the “medium” as a concept and shed light on the making of a minor culture in an increasingly connected world.
Friday, March.3, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Yunfei Shao(yunfeishao@uchicago.edu) or Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
Friday, Feb.24, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Alone in A Magnitude: Wandering Scholar in Fishing Village in Light Snow
Meng Zhao
Ph.D. Student, Art History, University of Chicago
Fishing Village in Light Snow 漁村小雪圖, Wang Shen, Northern Song Dynasty, Ink and color on silk, The Palace Museum
The end of the eleventh century witnessed a profound transformation of expectations regarding Chinese landscape painting and of the perception of nature itself. In departing from normative monumental landscape aesthetics that characterizes the preceding Northern Song landscape art, Wang Shen, an aristocratic bureaucrat and artist, crafted a so-called “dream landscape” defined by insubstantial forms, animated structure, and the play between proximity and distance. It is within this rhythmic setting that the wandering scholar first makes his debut in the history of Chinese landscape painting. In separating this scholarly wanderer from countless human figures oft depicted “decorating” natural environments, such as fishermen and woodcutters, this paper attempts to articulate and account for the otherness of the wandering scholar in landscape, as partly informed by the compositional logic of a richly atmospheric handscroll by Wang Shen, Fishing Village in Light Snow. For the first time in Chinese landscape painting, the individual mind is necessarily externalized as a human figure that endows landscape with a totalizing tenor which defines the theme of Light Snow as primarily human’s encounter with nature.
Friday, Feb.24, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Yunfei Shao(yunfeishao@uchicago.edu) or Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
Friday, Feb.10, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Camp for Posthumous Life: Spatial Conception of Liao Khitan Royal Tombs
Qi LU, Ph.D. Candidate, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Summer Landscape, Detail of Peonies and deer, South-west Wall, Central Chamber of the Eastern Mausoleum [After Tamura Jitsuzo and Kobayashi Yukio, Keiryo (Kyoto:Kyoto daigaku bungakubu, 1953), Plate 53.]
This paper explores the unique spatial conception of Liao royal tombs by investigating the murals in the Liao Eastern Mausoleum located at Qingling, with a special focus on the four seasonal landscape paintings. Though seen in tombs as early as the Han period, the landscape mural from the late Tang and Song onwards were often framed like screens that decorated the burial chamber as part of its interior furnishing. The four seasonal landscape murals installed on the four walls of the Eastern Mausoleum’s middle chamber have been discussed in the same line, but this paper argues for a different interpretation. Rather than used to help imagine an interior space, the mural’s monumental sizes and the zigzag composition with no frame that continue through all four murals immediately bring the inhabitable open field into the tomb space. As city culture flourished during the Tang-Song period, open country was conceptualized into a notion of wildness contrary to the cultivation of city. This concept of space is manifested in the pictorial programs in contemporaneous Han Chinese people’s tombs. However, the depiction of the inhabitable open country in the Khitan tombs actually reminds of their camp life and the blurry boundary between the living space and nature, interior and exterior. In the case of the Eastern Mausoleum, moving the four inhabitable hills into the tomb space in the cycle of the year, the subterranean chambers are transformed into an ideal yurt complex that is able to encamp at a different open space in each season, an effective way to bring about the nomadic lifestyle in the otherwise immobile underground space. In the later Khitan royal tombs, the yurt complex that the Eastern Mausoleum modeled after became a motif—a small-scaled replica—prevalently portrayed on the walls of the tomb passages. Rather than merely a model of the ideal structure, the yurt complex is placed on the camel chariot. Thus the logic reverses: people did not directly bring the mountains and trees into the tombs as seen in the Eastern Mausoleum, but the chariot, with the ideal yurt complex on it, is a movable home that allows the deceased to leave the “camp” and to move to the vast inhabitable open country outside the tomb. In other words, the pictorial program in the tomb over the Liao period in a sense turned the permanent underground space into a temporary camp for the emperor’s posthumous life.
Friday, Feb.10, 4:30 to 6:30pm, CWAC156
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Yunfei Shao(yunfeishao@uchicago.edu) or Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)
***This is a mock job talk. The same talk will be given twice in order to suit different schedule of the faculty. Participants are welcomed to attend either one. ***
Wednesday, Feb.8, 12 PM to 1 PM, CWAC 157
Thursday, Feb.9, 5 PM to 6 PM, CWAC 157
“Persian Brocades:” World, Community and Self in Chinese Sogdian Art
Jin Xu,Ph.D. Candidate, Art History, University of Chicago
Sogdians were an Iranian people originating in Central Asia. From the 3rd to 9th century CE, Sogdian merchants traveled extensively along the Silk Road, dominating the trade between the East and the West before the advent of Islamic civilization. Focusing on some best-known examples of their ritual and religious art, this talk discusses how Sogdian immigrant merchants in 6th-century China used “Persian Brocades” to express their cosmopolitan vision of the world, shared identity as a community, and individualistic view of the self. It is hoped that, through the eyes of Sogdian immigrants, we can gain confidence to handle the challenges the world is facing at the moment.
Wednesday, Feb.8, 12 PM to 1 PM, CWAC 157
Thursday, Feb.9, 5 PM to 6 PM, CWAC 157
Persons with concerns regarding accessibility please contact Yunfei Shao(yunfeishao@uchicago.edu) or Zhiyan Yang (zhiyan@uchicago.edu)