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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Fw: H-ASIA: Exhibition (concurrent with AAS): The Reformer's Brush

----- Original Message -----
From: "Monika Lehner" <monika.lehner@UNIVIE.AC.AT>
To: <H-ASIA@H-NET.MSU.EDU>
Sent: Saturday, February 19, 2011 2:24 PM
Subject: H-ASIA: Exhibition (concurrent with AAS): The Reformer's Brush


> H-ASIA
> February 19, 2011
>
> Exhibition (concurrent with AAS): The Reformer's Brush
> ******************************************************************
> From: Kate Lingley <lingley@hawaii.edu>
>
> Following up on the recent message from Fred Lau about our pre-AAS
> conference, here is some further information on the exhibition "The
> Reformer's Brush," which will be open before and throughout the AAS
> conference in Honolulu.
>
> ART EXHIBITION
> The Reformer's Brush: Modernity and Traditional Media in China
> The year 2011 marks the hundredth anniversary of the Xinhai Revolution,
> which saw the abdication of the six-year-old last emperor of the Qing
> Dynasty and led ultimately to the founding of the Republic of China. This
> exhibition, which features painting and calligraphy from late nineteenth
> and early twentieth-century China in the collections of Dr. Ernest and
> Letah Lee and Dr. Chin-tang Lo, examines the relationship between
> tradition and modernity in this transitional period. Many of the men at
> the center of the debates over modernization also cultivated the
> traditional practices of painting and calligraphy in ways that reflected
> or were engaged with the very questions of modernization and change that
> were central to their times. These include Chiang Kai-shek, Mei Lanfang,
> Liang Qichao, Kang Youwei, Guo Moruo, and many others. The Reformer's
> Brush showcases their artworks, their lives, and their ambitions for
> reform.
>
> LOCATION
> University of Hawaii Art Gallery
> Art Building, University of Hawaii at Manoa
>
> DATES
> February 27 - April 8, 2011
>
> SPONSORS
> Sponsored by the University of Hawaii at Manoa's Department of Art and Art
> History and the College of Arts; anonymous donors; and Manoa Arts & Minds,
> a partnership that cultivates the mind and spotlights the best of art,
> music, theater, dance and special performances at UH Manoa.
> http://www.manoa.hawaii.edu/chancellor/arts_minds/. Opening reception
> co-sponsored by the UHM Center for Chinese Studies.
>
> HOURS & ADMISSION
> Monday - Friday 10:30-5:00; Sunday 12:00-5:00.
> Closed Saturdays; Spring Break, March 21 - 25.
> Admission is free. Donations are appreciated.
> Parking fees may apply.
>
> OPENING PROGRAM
> Sunday, February 27, from 2:00-3:00
> UHM Art Auditorium, Room 132
>
> Do Great Political Thinkers Make Great Artists? Visual Culture as a Medium
> for Reform in Turn-of-the-Century China
> Keynote speaker: Shana J. Brown, Assistant Professor, Department of
> History, University of Hawaii at Manoa.
> Brown is a graduate of Amherst College and the University of California,
> Berkeley. She has studied, worked, and traveled extensively in China and
> Asia. Her area of expertise is modern Chinese intellectual and cultural
> history, with a special focus on visual culture in its global context.
>
> OPENING RECEPTION
> Sunday, February 27, from 3:00-5:00 p.m.
> The public is invited.
>
> PUBLICATION
> The 128-page full color catalogue for The Reformer's Brush: Modernity and
> Traditional Media in China features an essay by Dr. Kate Lingley,
> assistant professor of Chinese art history at the Department of Art and
> Art History, University of Hawaii at Manoa, and co-curator of the
> exhibition, that discusses the calligraphers and artists from the
> exhibition and their many contributions to politics, society, culture,
> art, and education at a pivotal point in Chinese history. The catalogue
> includes many color illustrations of their works of calligraphy and
> painting that were selected for the exhibition. It will be available for
> the special price of $28.00 at the University of Hawaii Art Gallery
> through April 8.
>
> WEBSITE
> Please visit http://www.hawaii.edu/artgallery for more information.
>
> --
> Kate A. Lingley, Ph.D.
> Assistant Professor of Chinese Art History
> Art History Program Chair
> Department of Art and Art History
> University of Hawai'i at Manoa
> 2535 McCarthy Mall
> Honolulu HI 96822
> tel: 808.956.8291 fax: 808.956.9043
>
>
> ******************************************************************
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