This book addresses the politics of borders in the era of global art by exploring the identification of Chinese artists by location and exhibition. Focusing on performative, body-oriented video works by the post-1989 generation, it tests the premise of genealogical inscription and the ways in which cultural objects are attributed to the artist’s residency, homeland or citizenship rather than cultural tradition, style or practice. Acknowledging historical definitions of Chineseness, including the orientalist assumptions of the past and the cultural-mixing of the present, the book’s case studies address the paradoxes and contradictions of representation. An analysis of the historical matrix of global expositions reveals the structural connections among art, culture, capital and nation.
Jane Chin Davidson is Professor of Art and Design at California State University, San Bernardino
Introduction: staging art and Chineseness1 Chineseness as a theoretical, historical and political problem in global art and exhibition2 Patty Chang and the transnational cinematic subject of Chineseness3 Environment, labor, and video: (eco) feminist interpellations of Chineseness in the work of Yuk King Tan, Cao Fei, Wu Mali4 The dialectical image of empire5 The archive of Chineseness: the global exposition and the museumIndex