In this striking publication the artistic endeavors of a group of young
artists in Beijing's East Village are captured in the photographs of Rong
Rong, one of the most talented artists to have emerged in China in the
last decade. Rong Rong moved from Fujian to Beijing in 1993, armed only
with his camera and his aspirations. Shortly after settling in a run-down
district of Beijing, he discovered that his neighbors included many young
artistic rebels who like himself had moved from the provinces to Beijing.
They soon
realized that conventional media was no longer adequate to convey
their sense of liberation from the social restraints of their adolescence.
Rong Rong was a vital witness during this brief period when a group of
painters, poets and musicians participated in performances that have come
to symbolize this dramatic moment when all barriers against freedom of
expression were demolished.
The forty photographs contained in the limited edition portfolio
designed by the artist are divided into three groups according to
their subjects and dates of execution. The first group, taken from
1993 to June 1994, portrays the East Village's artistic community
in its original location. The second group records continuing performances
by East Village artists from late 1994 to 1997, after the community
had been forced to disperse. The third group consists of Rong Rong's
self-portraits taken in his East Village days.
Rong Rong's photographs convey the drama and mystery of these surreptitious
performances. Zhang Huan's feats of endurance in Twelve Square Meters
and Forty Five Kilos contrast with the deadpan humor and ambiguous
sexuality of Ma Liuming's Fen/Ma Liuming's Lunch. His portraits of
the denizens of this shabby artistic community convey their self-awareness
and intensity while his views of the village itself are memorable
images of urban desolation. In the ten years since Rong Rong took
these photographs, the ethos that briefly united this fascinating
group of personalities has disappeared with the dispersal of the
artists and the destruction of their environment.
Accompanying this selection of photographs are extracts from the
diary Rong Rong kept while he was living in the East Village with
extensive commentary by Wu Hung, a Harry A. Vanderstappen Distinguished
Service Professor in Chinese Art History at the University of Chicago.
The journal is a detailed account of this formative period in the
development of a true Chinese avant-garde. In letters to his sister,
it vividly conveys his
excitement at discovering his true vocation as a photographer and
his wish to memorialize the personalities and events of this brief
period that he knew intuitively
would be significant in the development of Chinese art. It is copiously
illustrated with photographs that are being published for the first
time.
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