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Art Review

'Rising Dragon': Contemporary Chinese Photographs at San Jose Museum of Art

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Huang Yan, Spring, 2005.

The organizing principle around Rising Dragon, on view now through June 30, 2013, at the San Jose Museum of Art, is to showcase Chinese photographs produced between the last two Years of the Dragon, which occurred in 2000 and 2012. While that's a perfectly fine curatorial framework, and the restricted timeframe is more than coincidentally relevant, the photographs in this show routinely transcend their shared vintage.

With more than 100 works by 36 artists from mainland China (sorry, Taiwan), the exhibition is a respectable introduction to contemporary Chinese photography. One of the first pictures we see is Spring by Huang Han, whose face is painted with flowering trees, mountains, and a small village, à la a traditional Chinese scroll painting. Han is one of several artists in the show whose body is his canvas, the other being Zhang Huan, who had a trio of calligraphers spend a day marking his face with family names and stories until his skin was jet black. For both artists, their place in Chinese society both informs and obscures their identity, although Huan literally comes to a darker conclusion than Han, as seen in the grid of nine progressive images of the artist's face called Family Tree.


Maleonn (Ma Liang), Days on the Cotton Candy No. 1, 2006.

Nearby are several photographs by an artist who calls himself Maleonn, which is the phonetic spelling of his full name, Ma Liang. His pictures tell stories through their mixture of cross-cultural allusions, surrealism, and unabashed goofiness, all of which translates well to those of us schooled in Western visual vocabularies. In Days on the Cotton Candy No. 1, a young woman stands in a yellow, claw-foot bathtub while appearing to vacuum white cotton-candy-like clouds from the air, as if tidying up. Next to her is Maleonn's Shanghai Boys, whose paramilitary costumes and eccentric poses amid purple stuffed reptiles seems a true hybrid of East and West.

Another pair of storytellers are Liyu + Liubo, who riff on China's current crop of sensationalist tabloids, though they could just as easily be taking their inspiration from the breathless hysteria of Fox News or the bland improbability of The Onion. In each of the six examples on view, the artists concoct a deliberately bizarre headline (in one example, a thief chased until he crashes through the ceiling of an office building), and then illustrate the often silly results (the thief's legs dangle above a conference table, interrupting a meeting already in progress).


Liyu + Liubo, Escapee Dropped through the Floor, 2006.

Naturally, many artists in Rising Dragon are interested in making political statements, but certainly no more (or less) than you'd see on a tour of galleries in any US city. For example, O Zhang pairs political slogans or quotes by post-Mao leaders such as Deng Xiaoping ("Poverty Is Not Socialism") with photographs of, say, a middle-class girl in pigtails wearing a gaily lettered t-shirt that reads "Everything Is Shit." Then there's Liu Ren, whose Sleepwalker depicts Tiananmen Square filled with sheep.

My favorite artists in this marvelous show were probably Yao Lu and Li Lang, although their work could not be more different. Yao Lu is represented in the exhibition by two photographs, each resembling a traditional scroll painting. Upon closer inspection, though, we notice the mountains and land forms in the artist's photos are actually collages of mounds of garbage and debris that have been covered with green netting, a common sight in China, especially in and around large cities like Beijing.


Li Lang, Yi People #057, 2001.

For different reasons, I was surprisingly affected by Li Lang's modest, black-and-white photograph titled Yi People #057 from 2001. In it, three men of obviously limited means stand in front of a picturesque backdrop, as if they were having their portraits taken in their traditional garb. Instead, they are dressed in their street clothes, and we can see the lighting equipment for the photo shoot; clearly the artist is at once imposing artifice upon the viewer but also winking at its presence.

But it was the look in the eyes of these men that got me. The first is older than the others, his weathered face, we imagine, revealing the suffering endured during the Cultural Revolution of the 1960s and '70s. In the center is a slighter younger man, who carries a 1980s boombox, dangles a cigarette from his lips and thinks he's a big deal in his clean, white basketball shoes. To his right is the youngest man, his eyes emptied (again, we imagine) by too much television coverage of people in Shanghai living high on the hog. His lot must be the toughest of the three -- he knows that a better, more prosperous China is out there for the taking, just not for him.

Rising Dragon runs through June 30, 2013, at San Jose Museum of Art. For more information, visit sjmusart.org.

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