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Spontaneous and ephemeral, performance art in China developed in the 1980s and ’90s among close-knit artistic circles and audiences. Such performances relied heavily on photographs, video documentation, artist books, and oral accounts to be disseminated to subsequent audiences. Initially, these photographs and videos were considered documentations of performances rather than artworks in and of themselves. Increasingly, however, their outsize role in staging and mediating performances prompted new interest in their artistic potentials. As the Beijing-based artist Song Dong has remarked about his own photographed performances, “Is it a photographic work or a performance work? It’s very hard to say, so I always dislike calling my works documentations of performances.”
Performance photographs and videos allow secondary audiences to reimagine and become contemporary with performances past. A performance work might be staged spontaneously by an artist, photographed in distinct ways by different artists, witnessed by a small group of primary audiences, and exhibited many years later as a photograph or video for an entirely separate group of audiences. These instances of mediation point to the multimedial nature of performance works and pose questions about where the “real” artwork can be located, if at all.
Intersections between performance art and the rise of conceptual photography in China during the mid-to-late-1990s further blurred the boundaries between performance and documentation. In cases where a performance is staged without a live audience for the purpose of being conveyed as a photograph or video, the document itself becomes the performance.
For artists aware of the potential risks of censorship, the ability to convey performances through a variety of different mediums, including underground artist publications, enhanced performance art’s subversive potential. Yet not all performances can be understood through this framework. While photographers Xing Danwen and RongRong were known for documenting seminal works by performance artists such as Zhang Huan and Ma Liuming in the 1990s, they have since expanded their art practice to emphasize the performative potential of photography and video. Other artists such as Song Dong, Qiu Zhijie, Lin Yilin, and Liu Bolin use photography and video to visualize the simultaneous visibility and invisibility of their own bodies. Videos by Chen Xiaoyun, Cheng Ran, and Jiang Zhi from the collection of Dr. Michael I. Jacobs, MD ’77, a prescient early collector of videos by emerging Chinese artists, thematize the visceral and theatrical body. More recently, a new generation of female artists including Chen Qiulin, Pixy Liao, Ma Qiusha, and Miao Ying—a recipient of the 2019 Cornell Tech \Art Award—has combined performance, photography, video, new media, and even artificial intelligence to address a range of topics from the individual’s relationship to the changing cityscape to gender, sexuality, and behavior in the age of media culture.
Between Performance and Documentation: Contemporary Photography and Video from China brings together works from the Johnson Museum collection and archival video footage from Cornell Library’s Wen Pulin Archive of Chinese Avant-garde Art with loans from artists, private collectors, and other institutions. Featuring a wide range of works, the exhibition reveals the multifaceted history of contemporary performance, photography, and video in China, while showcasing emerging artists who continue to push the boundaries of performance and mediation in radically new ways.
The exhibition was curated by Nancy P. Lin, Klarman Postdoctoral Fellow in the Department of History of Art and Visual Studies, and Ellen Avril, chief curator and the Judith H. Stoikov Curator of Asian Art at the Johnson Museum, and supported by a gift endowed in memory of Elizabeth Miller Francis ’47, the Richard Sukenik ’59 Endowment for Photography, the Ames Exhibition Endowment, the Russell ’77 and Diana Hawkins Exhibition Fund, and the Jan Abrams Exhibition Endowment.
A symposium will be held at the Johnson Museum on November 16 and 17 in conjunction with the exhibition, supported by a generous gift from Judith Stoikov ’63 (schedule to be announced).