After “100 Vintage Prints: Exhibition Tour of the Collection of Charles Jin 20th Century Works of Western Photographers in China” was successfully held in China in 2011, Jin turned his focus of collection to China. In a short period of nearly four years, his collection of Chinese contemporary photography has amounted to over 300 pieces, which include the works by over fifty important contemporary artists since the 1990s. For this exhibition, works are selected and showcased around the theme of “From Iconography to Photography.”
Photography in China experienced a great transformation in the last 30 years. Chinese photographers extensively accepted Western contemporary photography, which directly led to a discursive turn in transformation. During these decades, nearly all the photographers were imitating and learning from Western masters’ images and schemes (image language). Nevertheless, a few photographers such as Adams, Bresson, Marc Ribound, Salgado, Eugene Smith basically stand in for the whole. There are plenty more photographers who have been recognized as of extremely high artistic value by others in the great traditional photography system constructed by imagery language, but they have never been heard before or were only understood by Chinese people.
However great changes and happenings with Chinese contemporary photography led to: on the one hand, a group of artists who have emerged since 1990s that have appeared to have recently matured, such as Wang Qingsong, Liu Zheng, Wang Ningde, etc. and their maturity reflects in their increasingly clear comprehension of the social reality they are living in while their attempt in breaking through photography media represented their profound introspection and understanding; on the other hand, a group of artists represented by Fu Yu, started to center around the vintage print to study and establish cognition through the research of “straight photography” in the western tradition of photography. In addition, a group of young artists that studied abroad and returned to China, as well as those who have grown up in China , have a more comprehensive knowledge structure of photography, thus their works tend to be more relaxed and diversified, and their execution, control in the ability of works are more comprehensive than the older generation of artists. In this sense, the return from iconography to photography has become a more important indwelling reform and transformation in recent Chinese contemporary photography.
Excerpts from Preface by Cai Meng
About the exhibition
Director: Wang Huangsheng
Curator: Cai Meng
Opening: 16 October, 2015, 4:00pm
Duration: 25 September —29 November, 2015
Venue: Cipa Gallery
Courtesy of Cipa Gallery, edited by Sue/CAFA ART INFO