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[Commlist] CCVA Annual Conference cfp: Magical Metropolis — the Shanghai Surreal
Tue Apr 04 07:35:20 GMT 2023
CALL FOR PAPERS deadline extended to 17th April
The 16th Annual Conference, the Centre for Chinese Visual Arts,
Birmingham City University
Theme: Magical Metropolis — the Shanghai Surreal Date: 23-24 November
2023 Venue: School of Art, Birmingham City University, UK (in-person only)
Deadline for abstracts: 17th April 2023
For the first time, the CCVA annual conference instrumentalises a
specific cityscape to provoke discussions, debates, and new
understandings in a transdisciplinary context. This year, we focus on
Shanghai, popularly known as modu (magical metropolis) today.
Following the First Opium War (1839-42), Shanghai involuntarily opened
to European trade whilst certain areas were forcibly rented by imperial
powers under an unjust semi-colonial system of concessions. The city
rapidly developed into one of Asia’s thriving treaty ports, a
cosmopolitan metropolis which became the Chinese art world’s nucleus
amidst the Republican era (1911-1949). During the 1930s, Surrealism
entered Shanghai through returnee study-abroad students who encountered
the movement in France and Japan. Disseminated through a nexus of
copious periodicals, manhua, exhibitions, artist’s studios, and art
collectives such as the Storm Society (juelanshe), Surrealism was
concentrated in the city’s former French and international concessions,
purveying a repertoire of distorted nudes, oneiric cityscapes, and
political dystopia. The Shanghai Surreal can also be characterised
across performing arts, architecture, cinema, animation, urban
transformations, and everyday life. Indeed, Parisian Surrealists
praised Hollywood films such as The Shanghai Gesture (1941) which
propagated a distinctly orientalist urban mythology, counter to their
Chinese peers.
Under Mao, Shanghai became a surreal palimpsest, architectural vestiges
of its capitalist past threatened socialist modernity. Imperial urban
spaces were re-appropriated, resembling a Surrealist dreamscape blending
past and present. The city became a hub for poster production and other
forms of revolutionary propaganda wherein fantastical imagery distorted
reality into an unintentional form of the surreal, a reconciliation of
‘the real and the imagined’ (Breton: 1924). Model Operas (Yangban xi),
which commingled communist ideals with traditional theatre, were
performed for the very first time in Shanghai at a 1964 festival.
Moreover, the Shanghai Animation Studio, founded in 1957, produced Havoc
in Heaven (1961) which utilised metaphysical elements of Daoist folklore
to advocate a Communist message.
After the Reform and Opening Up (1978), the Third (and first
international-facing) Shanghai Biennial in 2000 ‘legitimised’ Chinese
avant-garde art in a state-owned institution (Wu 2019). The exhibition
included the display of Surrealistic artwork. Once again, Shanghai
became a global centre for contemporary art, catalysing an art museum
boom and international exchange. In this respect, Berghuis (2007) argued
that a ‘New Shanghai Surreal’ can ‘overcome the past conditions of
socialist-realism as well as the present-day vehement conditions of pure
capitalism’, invoking Surrealism’s dialectical reconciliation of
opposing forces (Breton 1929). Most recently, during Spring 2022, the
government’s ‘Zero-Covid Policy’ (Qingling zhengce), locked down
Shanghai’s 25 million inhabitants for two months. This irrational,
surreal experience of everyday life prompted direct responses and
protests from artists and other creative professionals.
From the Republican era to the present day, The Shanghai Surreal reflects the city’s moniker modu, a simultaneously magical yet intoxicating city where East vs West, tradition vs modernity and, more recently socialism and capitalism coexist. We welcome art-historical studies of Shanghainese Surrealism alongside broader, multidisciplinary conceptions of Shanghai as a ‘Surreal City’. Possible perspectives include but are not limited to:
Surrealist references or strategies amongst Shanghai related
artists/groupings/exhibitions. Surreality in Shanghainese periodicals,
manhua and visual culture. Shanghai’s urban transformations and
architecture. The Shanghai Surreal in film, animation, and theatrical
forms. Surreal visualities and testimonies of Shanghai covid lockdowns.
Please submit one document containing 1) an abstract of up to 300 words;
2) a 100-word biography, contact information and any institutional
affiliation by 17th April 2023 to Dr. Lauren Walden
((lauren.walden /at/ bcu.ac.uk)) and (ccva /at/ bcu.ac.uk). Applications from all
career stages and postgraduate students are most welcome. Following the
conference, selected papers will be invited for publication in the
Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art indexed by Scopus. Please kindly
note this is an in-person only event.
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