Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (2024)

The first major exhibition of Chinese contemporary art ever mounted by the Metropolitan, Ink Art explores how contemporary works from a non-Western culture may be displayed in an encyclopedic art museum. Presented in the Museum's permanent galleries for Chinese art, the exhibition features artworks that may best be understood as part of the continuum of China's traditional culture. These works may also be appreciated from the perspective of global art, but by examining them through the lens of Chinese historical artistic paradigms, layers of meaning and cultural significance that might otherwise go unnoticed are revealed. Ultimately, both points of view contribute to a more enriched understanding of these artists' creative processes.

For more than two millennia, ink has been the principal medium of painting and calligraphy in China. Since the early twentieth century, however, the primacy of the "ink art" tradition has increasingly been challenged by new media and practices introduced from the West. Ink Art examines the creative output of a selection of Chinese artists from the 1980s to the present who have fundamentally altered inherited Chinese tradition while maintaining an underlying identification with the expressive language of the culture's past.

Featuring some seventy works by thirty-five artists in various media—paintings, calligraphy, photographs, woodblock prints, video, and sculpture—created during the past three decades, the exhibition is organized thematically into four parts: The Written Word, New Landscapes, Abstraction, and Beyond the Brush. Although all of the artists have challenged, subverted, or otherwise transformed their sources through new modes of expression, Ink Art seeks to demonstrate that China's ancient pattern of seeking cultural renewal through the reinterpretation of past models remains a viable creative path.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (1)

Gu Wenda. Mythos of Lost Dynasties Series—I Evaluate Characters Written by Three Men and Three Women. China, 1985. Hanging scroll; ink on paper. Image: 9 ft. 4 1/4 in. × 70 1/16 in. (285.1 × 178 cm). Lent by a private collection, Hong Kong

Writing is China's most fundamental means of communication as well as its highest form of artistic expression. Valued for both its semantic content and aesthetic significance, the written word conveys both personal and public meaning. Authors have long exploited the multiple, even contradictory meanings of many ideographs to create veiled commentaries on political and personal issues, while calligraphers have adopted specific styles to reflect their mental state or point of view. Given the inherent power of this universal medium, the written word—particularly brush-written calligraphy—has been a rich terrain for artistic exploration in China. This section of the exhibition—which comprises three subsections—examines the many ways in which writing may exist as an aesthetic language independent of semantic content.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (2)

Liu Dan. Dictionary. China, 1991. Ink and watercolor on paper. Image: 81 1/8 in. × 10 ft. (206 × 304.8 cm). Lent by Collection of Akiko Yamazaki and Jerry Yang

Artists have utilized various interventions—writing with dilute ink or with a burning instrument or by employing trompe l'oeil realism on a grand scale—to divorce writing from its traditional role and give it a new pictorial or sculptural dimension. The brush-written components of Chinese calligraphy have even been deconstructed and adapted to transform English into a character-based form of communication.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (3)

Zhang Huan. Family Tree. China, 2001. Nine chromogenic prints. Sheet (each): 21 in. × 16 1/2 in. (53.3 × 41.9 cm). Image courtesy of Yale University Art Gallery, Leonard C. Hanna, Jr., Class of 1913, Fund

Three series of photographs address the traditional calligraphic discipline of replicating texts over and over again—either as an act of merit in the case of holy scriptures, or as a means of attaining individual proficiency. In the latter case, students immerse themselves in the study of past models until the physical rhythms of a writing style became second nature—much the way an athlete or musician gradually masters increasingly demanding techniques. Such mastery is regarded as a necessary first step in achieving creative freedom.

The works displayed in this section question the consequences of repetition. It may lead to a meditative state of higher consciousness, but it may ultimately leave no lasting impression. It may also obliterate the original content of a text or the individuality of the practitioner—or both.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (4)

徐冰 天书 Xu Bing (b. 1955). Book from the Sky, ca. 1987–91. Installation of hand-printed books and ceiling and wall scrolls printed from wood letterpress type; ink on paper. Collection of the artist

Book from the Sky, first mounted in China in 1988 and 1989 and subsequently displayed many times in different countries, is one of the most iconic works of contemporary Chinese art. Thepresentation within Ink Art, overseen by the artist and his studio, reflects the specific characteristics of this space, but remains consistent with the artist's desire to create an environment that immerses the viewer in a sea of imaginary words: open books spread across the floor, long sheets suggestive of handscrolls suspended from the ceiling, and bulletin-board–like arrays of vertical panels along the walls.

But while the work is inspired by the form and typography of traditional Chinese woodblock publications, faithfully replicating every stylistic detail of traditional Chinese printing, not a single one of its roughly 1,200 characters—each printed with type hand-carved by the artist—is intelligible. Each of these imaginary characters conveys the appearance of legibility but remains defiantly undecipherable.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (5)

Duan Jianyu. Beautiful Dream 4. China, 2008. Ink on cardboard. 17 1/4 × 13 in. (43.8 × 33 cm). Lent by the Sigg Collection

Over the past one thousand years, landscape imagery in China has evolved beyond formal and aesthetic considerations into a complex symbolic program used to convey values and moral standards. In the eleventh century, court-sponsored mountainscapes with a central peak towering over a natural hierarchy of hills, trees, and waterways might be read as a metaphor for the emperor presiding over his well-ordered state. At times of political turmoil, images of blasted pine trees, windblown bamboo, or rustic retreats conveyed notions of survival, endurance, and withdrawal from the world. Today, as China is transformed by modernization, artists continue to mine the symbolic potential of landscape imagery to comment on the changing face of China and to explore the "mind landscape" of the individual. The paintings, photographs, videos, and animation in this section of the exhibition highlight the diverse ways in which contemporary artists have drawn inspiration from earlier compositions and themes. Some offer stark commentaries on China's rapidly expanding urban landscapes, while others explore man's dynamic relationships with changing environments, both built and natural.

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墨水城市/Ink City, 2005. Chen Shaoxiong. Video (black and white, sound)/3 min. loop

Since the late 1980s, Chinese artists have embraced video as a way to engage critically with issues of globalization and cultural identity. Many of these works include imagery appropriated from China's past, including ancient landscape painting and early twentieth-century Chinese cinema, as well as from contemporary life. Animated videos, in particular, have been laboriously crafted employing traditional mediums such as ink sketches or woodblock printing to present trenchant commentaries on urban experience, material culture, or narratives of China's recent past.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (6)

Zhang Yu. Divine Light Series No. 59, The Floating Incomplete Circle. China, 1998. Hanging scroll; ink on paper. Image: 9 ft. 7 3/8 in. × 70 7/8 in. (293 × 180 cm). Lent by a private collection, Hong Kong

Abstraction lies at the very heart of Chinese painting and calligraphy. Because the brush mark, in addition to performing a descriptive or semantic role, has always been recognized as a record of the artist's hand, both painting and calligraphy have been valued for their abstract expressive potential. Benefitting from this rich tradition of exploiting the abstract and symbolic qualities of painting and writing, contemporary Chinese artists have selectively engaged with Western notions of nonfigurative art to augment and expand their expressive goals. Some artists have used their command of traditional techniques to create large-scale abstractions emphasizing the dynamic gestural qualities of calligraphy while divorcing the work from any suggestion of semantic meaning. Others have used traditional media to create new nonfigurative imagery, to explore the materiality of their chosen medium, or to emphasize artistic process.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (7)

Huang Yongping. Long Scroll. China, 2001. Handscroll; watercolor, pencil, colored pencil, and ink on paper. Overall: 13 1/4 in. × 50 ft. 3 in. (33.7 × 1531.6 cm). Lent by The Museum of Modern Art, New York

Some works in the exhibition defy easy categorization, but all display what might be termed an "ink aesthetic" through their selective revival of past models. One group is made up of conceptual or performance-based pieces that nevertheless make use of traditional media or formats to create permanent records of ephemeral installations or events. A second group includes three-dimensional works that do not use ink itself as a medium, but that embody an ink aesthetic in so far as their forms are inspired by traditional artworks that derive from Chinese literati pastimes or patronage.

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Ink Art: Past as Present in Contemporary China (2024)

FAQs

What is out of ink interpretations from Chinese contemporary art? ›

Out of Ink: Interpretations from Chinese Contemporary Art explored the essential ideals of the ink painting tradition as manifest in the work of 13 contemporary artists at work in China. Their art does not necessarily rely upon conventional materials – ink, paper, or brush – but encapsulates the cultural spirit of ink.

What is the history of Chinese ink painting? ›

It emerged during the Tang dynasty of China (618–907), and overturned earlier, more realistic techniques. It is typically monochrome, using only shades of black, with a great emphasis on virtuoso brushwork and conveying the perceived "spirit" or "essence" of a subject over direct imitation.

How ink wash paintings were important in Chinese culture? ›

During the time of the Song dynasty, the ink wash painting became known as literati painting in which the artists used the literal shapes of the objects only as channels through which they can express their emotions, feelings, and thoughts.

How did Chinese art become contemporary? ›

Most narratives of Chinese Contemporary Art start from the end of the Cultural Revolution. Around 1979, Chinese artists were suddenly exposed to western art history, which led to a rapid turnover of artistic styles. Different art historians have different opinions about what happened next.

What is Chinese ink art called? ›

Ink and wash painting, in Chinese shuǐ-mò (水墨, "water and ink") also loosely termed watercolor or brush painting, and also known as "literati painting", as it was one of the "four arts" of the Chinese Scholar-official class.

Why is ink important to China? ›

Ink has been not only the primary medium of literary visual artistic expression, but has also played a pivotal role in the formation and maintenance of the Chinese cultural complex. Without ink, it is impossible to tell what the historical landscape of China would look like.

What did the Chinese use ink for? ›

Leaving aside such cases as inscriptions incised in stone or cast in bronze, almost all traditional writing in China, as well as a good deal of painting, has used the material known as Chinese ink.

What was Chinese ink made of? ›

Chinese ink, a mixture of soot and animal glue, has been used in East Asia for centuries as the sole black paint of choice. The combination of animal glue and soot particles create a distinctive dispersion system giving Chinese ink its unique properties among paints and inks.

What was ink used for in ancient China? ›

In ancient China, the development of writing using brush and ink was a significant milestone in the country's cultural and intellectual history. The origins of this writing tradition can be traced back to the Shang Dynasty (1600-1046 BCE), although the practice continued to evolve and refine over several centuries.

What are the techniques of Chinese ink art? ›

The two main Chinese ink painting techniques: Gongbi – literally' working pen', is a meticulous style, rich in color and detailed brush strokes. Xieyi – ('writing'), meaning “freehand,” is a looser style of painting and is usually used in landscapes.

What are the benefits of painting with ink? ›

One of the benefits of using ink is its ability to help in the teaching of brush technique. You can paint much longer, thinner or thicker lines and all with one brush when using ink. Ink can also be used beautifully when teaching students about value – light and dark in an artwork.

What is Chinese contemporary art? ›

Chinese Contemporary art is characterized by a profusion of styles and experimental tendencies. Avant- garde exhibitions in the 1980s were closed by government officials, while 1990s political pop and cynical realism emerged.

When did Chinese contemporary art start? ›

From its underground genesis during the Cultural Revolution (1966–76), contemporary Chinese art has become a dynamic and hugely influential force in a globalized art world.

What caused contemporary art? ›

From a social and economic point of view, it was the development of a consumer society (increase in productivity and goods manufacturing, economic growth, the rise of the middle class in industrialised countries) and its excesses that inspired artists.

What is the Chinese interpretation of art? ›

This is the aim of the traditional Chinese painter: to capture not only the outer appearance of a subject but its inner essence as well—its energy, life force, spirit. To accomplish his goal, the Chinese painter more often than not rejected the use of color.

What are some of the differences between Japanese ink painting and Chinese ink painting? ›

Chinese artistic expression is distinguished by its creations on paper and silk using brushes saturated in black or colored ink. Conversely, Japanese art exhibits a diverse range, encompassing wood and bronze sculptures, ancient pottery, silk and paper ink paintings, oil paintings, calligraphy, and more.

Why was ink important in ancient China? ›

Chinese ink has very special significance for presentation of artistic effects and preservation of works of art; however, wasted nonrenewable resources, potential toxicity, and complex and inefficient production technologies have limited the development of inks for traditional Chinese culture.

What are the 5 different types of black ink tone in Chinese painting? ›

THE BEAUTY OF THE SHADES OF CHINESE INK

The ink has five different hues: burnt black, dark black, deep black, pure black and light black. Artists can make use of this extensive range of blacks to portray a specific object in different layers and to show its essence, thus arriving at a classically refined style of art.

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