The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art

The purpose of this paper is to determine whether there is an incipient market in China strong enough to replace the global market for Chinese contemporary art. The (informal) market I have identified supports traditional methods of transaction and practice. It charts a course twixt slavish emulatio...

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Main Author: Iain Robertson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Arts
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/121
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spelling doaj-97989814fb3d4b7e8e821b2ad20d01f52020-11-27T08:02:30ZengMDPI AGArts2076-07522020-11-01912112110.3390/arts9040121The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary ArtIain Robertson0Sotheby’s Institute of Art, London WC1B 3EE, UKThe purpose of this paper is to determine whether there is an incipient market in China strong enough to replace the global market for Chinese contemporary art. The (informal) market I have identified supports traditional methods of transaction and practice. It charts a course twixt slavish emulation of the past and unqualified acceptance of the present. To demonstrate the contemporary application of this trend, I introduce three case studies, which examine the attitude and behaviour of three Chinese artists active between 2005 and 2015. This period marks the transformation of China from an aspirant economic power to a self-confident advocate of Chinese values. The premise of this paper is that the China market today is moving towards a harmonious ideal rooted in Chinese thought. In the nineteenth-century art movement known as the Shanghai School, I have found a precedent for the evolutionary transformation of Chinese art from the traditional to the modern. This study will reveal how the Shanghai School market might be an exemplar for today’s Chinese contemporary art market. I will refer to this historical model to show how conventional methods of creation, distribution and consumption can effectively be modernised. Another effort to culturally transform China was attempted a generation later in the southern city of Guangzhou. The movement, known as the Lingnan School, attempted to fuse Western-style realism with Chinese techniques and media. I argue that these two early attempts to amalgamate the traditional with the modern failed to metamorphose into a consolidated Chinese contemporary art market model. They have, instead, resulted in the co-existence of two corrupted models; the one, a diffident fusion of the past and the modern world, and the other a concerted alliance of nationalism and globalism.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/121international contemporary art (market)modern art market(neo) traditional art marketLingnan SchoolShanghai Schoolinternational contemporary art market
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Iain Robertson
spellingShingle Iain Robertson
The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art
Arts
international contemporary art (market)
modern art market
(neo) traditional art market
Lingnan School
Shanghai School
international contemporary art market
author_facet Iain Robertson
author_sort Iain Robertson
title The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art
title_short The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art
title_full The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art
title_fullStr The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art
title_full_unstemmed The Evolution of a Consolidated Market for Neo-Traditional Chinese Contemporary Art
title_sort evolution of a consolidated market for neo-traditional chinese contemporary art
publisher MDPI AG
series Arts
issn 2076-0752
publishDate 2020-11-01
description The purpose of this paper is to determine whether there is an incipient market in China strong enough to replace the global market for Chinese contemporary art. The (informal) market I have identified supports traditional methods of transaction and practice. It charts a course twixt slavish emulation of the past and unqualified acceptance of the present. To demonstrate the contemporary application of this trend, I introduce three case studies, which examine the attitude and behaviour of three Chinese artists active between 2005 and 2015. This period marks the transformation of China from an aspirant economic power to a self-confident advocate of Chinese values. The premise of this paper is that the China market today is moving towards a harmonious ideal rooted in Chinese thought. In the nineteenth-century art movement known as the Shanghai School, I have found a precedent for the evolutionary transformation of Chinese art from the traditional to the modern. This study will reveal how the Shanghai School market might be an exemplar for today’s Chinese contemporary art market. I will refer to this historical model to show how conventional methods of creation, distribution and consumption can effectively be modernised. Another effort to culturally transform China was attempted a generation later in the southern city of Guangzhou. The movement, known as the Lingnan School, attempted to fuse Western-style realism with Chinese techniques and media. I argue that these two early attempts to amalgamate the traditional with the modern failed to metamorphose into a consolidated Chinese contemporary art market model. They have, instead, resulted in the co-existence of two corrupted models; the one, a diffident fusion of the past and the modern world, and the other a concerted alliance of nationalism and globalism.
topic international contemporary art (market)
modern art market
(neo) traditional art market
Lingnan School
Shanghai School
international contemporary art market
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0752/9/4/121
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