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Made In China: The ‘Whereabouts’ Of Moving Image Production In Asia

Thursday 22 November 2018, 3 pm

— Barbara London in conversation with Marko Daniel

Cao Fei, 'Haze and Fog', 2013.
Cao Fei, 'Haze and Fog', 2013.
Speakers
Barbara London and Marko Daniel
Venues
Almanac Barcelona
Price
Free admission
Tickets & register

Access to the Talks is free with the LOOP professional accreditation

Language
English
Date and hours
Thursday 22 November 2018, 3 pm Add to calendar

Barbara London and Marko Daniel take a look at how the work of the youngest generation of media artists in China differs from that of their elders. The more emerging grew up with the Internet and access to computers and information, whereas the more senior were shaped by the Cultural Revolution and made do with limited means. As examples, the speakers will consider the ideas and motives behind five artists’ productions: Zhang Peili, Song Dong, Xu Zhen, Cao Fei, and Lu Yang.

Barbara London

Speaker
Barbara London

Curator Barbara London is the author of Video/Art, the First Fifty Years, published by Phaidon and available January 14, 2020. Recently she organized Seeing Sound, an exhibition that places its audience in immersive encounters with sound as art, and challenges the private quality of our contemporary sonic experience. Featuring the work of eight international artists, the show will circulate through Independent Curators International, 2020-2025. Ms. London founded the video exhibition and collection programs at The Museum of Modern Art, where she worked between 1973 and 2013. During her tenure, she oversaw the acquisition of more than 1000 media art works, including installations, single-channel videotapes, and music videos. Among the over 200 exhibitions she organized include one-person shows featuring early audiovisual mavericks Nam June Paik, Bill Viola, Steina Vasulka, Joan Jonas, Shigeko Kubota, Catalina Parra, Peter Campus, Gary Hill, VALIE EXPORT, Steve McQueen, and Laurie Anderson. She was the first curator in the United States to showcase the careers of Asia-based media artists Zhang Peili, Song Dong, Teiji Furuhashi, Feng Mengbo, and Yang Fudong. Similarly, she was the first to research and showcase media from Latin America. Her thematic projects have included Video from Tokyo to Fukui and Kyoto; New Video from China; Anime!, Stillness (Michael Snow and Sam Taylor-Wood), Automatic Update; Looking at Music, parts 1-3; Through the Weeping Glass: On Consolations of Life Everlasting (Limbos & Afterbreezes in the Mütter Museum) with the Quay Brothers; Music Video: the Industry and Its Fringes; and Soundings: A Contemporary Score at MoMA. She is an adjunct professor at Yale University and is a consultant with the Kadist Foundation, San Francisco and Paris.

 

Last update 23rd October 2019

Marko Daniel

Speaker

1964, Aachen

Marko Daniel

Marko Daniel (Aachen, Germany, 1964) was awarded a degree in History of Art and Philosophy by the University College London (1988), a PhD in History and Theory of Art by the University of Essex (1989), and is an expert on Chinese and Catalan contemporary art. Daniel developed a teaching career at the Winchester School of Art (part of the University of Southampton) (Lecturer 1994- 2001, and Director of Graduate School 2003-2006). In 2006, Marko Daniel joined Tate Modern in London as Curator of Public Programmes. Since 2011 he has held the post of Convenor of Public Programmes for the two London sites of Tate, Tate Modern and Tate Britain. During this period, he developed a programme of more than 350 public events per year in the two Tate museums in London, and promoted research into modern and contemporary art, especially Chinese, as part of the Tate’s programme and collections. Amongst other projects, Marko Daniel was co-curator, with Matthew Gale and Teresa Montaner, of Joan Miró: The Ladder of Escape, shown between 2011 and 2012 at Tate Modern in London, the National Gallery of Art in Washington in the US, and at the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona. Since 2018 he is Director of the Fundació Joan Miró, Barcelona.