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Modern Sculpture
Chinese sculpture has
experienced further development since the Revolution of 1911. Its dissemination
and promotion achieved prominent progress.
After the 20th Century, Chinese
traditional religious sculpture was on the wane. Though the small folk sculpture
was still very flourish, it failed to be the mainstream. During the years
around the Revolution of 1911, some young people went to Britain, America, Japan
and other foreign countries to learn sculpture. During the period between the May
4th Movement (1919) and the 1930s, many young artists
went to foreign countries such as Canada, France, Japan and Belgium
learning sculpture. After returning home, they held several sculpture exhibitions,
which greatly promoted the development of Chinese on-the-shelf sculpture. Most of
them, who devoted themselves to art education, became pioneers of
Chinese modern sculpture. Sculpture education in Chinese academy of fine arts began
in 1920 when Sculpture Department was established in Shanghai Academy of
Fine Arts, followed by Hangzhou Academy of Fine Arts and Beiping Academy of Fine
Arts, etc. Some large creations include statues in memory of Sun Yat-Sen and
other republic revolutionists, as well as monument to heroes in War of
Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1937-1945), and so on. Sculpture art has
greatly developed since the establishment of People's Republic of China. Sculpture
Department was common in art colleges and students, including graduates, were sent to
the Soviet Union to study sculpture.
On-the-Shelf
Sculpture
During the 1920s to 1940s, a
good number of statues appeared in various exhibitions, combined with lyrical
works and a few relieves. Li Tiefu, who learnt sculpture and oil painting in
America, and another two artists called Liang Zhuting and Chen Xijun, created
statues of Sun Yat-Sen respectively. After the establishment of People's
Republic of China, on-the-shelf sculpture made new progress. Wood, stone, bronze
and other hard materials were in wide use and the probe into sculpture language
also made prominent achievement.
Large Memorial Sculpture
and Garden Sculpture
The earliest memorial
sculpture is the Statue of Shi Jianru created during early years of the
Republic of China. After 1925 when Sun Yat-Sen died, many memorial statues of
him were created in Guangzhou, Beijing, Wuhan, Chengdu, Nanjing and other
cities, among which the earliest one was the Statue of Sun Yat-Sen by
Jiang Xiaojian established in the center of Shanghai in Nov. 1925. A public
appraisal about statues of Sun Yat-Sen was held in 1935, the Sun Yat-Sen
Giving Speech, created by Teng Baiye, won the first prize. During that
period, sculptors created many memorial statues for republic revolutionists who
passed away or devoted their lives in battles.
Monuments in memory of
revolutionary martyrs have been established in many places since the
establishment of People's Republic of China, for instance, the Memorial Tower
to Revolutionary Martyrs established in 1949 in Linni of Shandong Province,
Monument to Soviet Union Martyrs
(bronze, by Lu Gongji) established in Dalian of Liaoning Province in
1955, and so on. The most magnificent work in the 1950s is the Monument to
People's Heroes in Tian'anmen Square, Beijing, which was established
according to the resolution of the First Plenary Session in Chinese People's
Political Consultative Conference held in Sept. 30th 1949. The
construction started in Aug. 1st 1952 and finished in May
1st 1958.
City Environmental
Sculpture
In terms of city environmental sculpture,
the successful works of early times are the two groups of sculptures in
National Agricultural Exhibition Center in Beijing, which were created by the Sculpture
Department of Lu Xun Academy of Fine Arts and finished in 1959. Combined
with techniques of western sculpture and Chinese traditional sculpture, this
group of sculpture manifested Chinese people's determination to become stronger.
Swan by Su Hui, established in Yanjiang Garden of Harbin in 1963, is
among the early large garden sculptures.
Some outstanding works
successfully accommodated to city environment contain Fisher Girl (stone
sculpture by Pan He, Duan Jiyu and Duan Qilai, 1982) of Zhuhai on the seashore
of Zhuhai City in Guangdong Province, group sculptures called Spring, Summer,
Autumn and Winter (aluminum alloy, 1984) placed at the end of Chongqing
Yangtze River Bridge, Dove of Peace (bronze, by Wang Yilin, 1984) in
Heping Li, Beijing, Reading (stone sculpture, by Situ Zhaoguang, 1985) on
Zhengyi Road of Beijing, sculpture group Fable (stone sculpture, by Liu
Zhengde, 1985) in the East Lake Scenic Spot of Wuhan in Hubei Province, and so
on. Group Sculpture called Five Sheeps (stone sculpture, by Yin Jichang,
Chen Benzong and Kong Fanwei, 1959) and Ox Led by the Nose (bronze, by
Pan He, 1984) in front of the building of Shenzhen municipal Party Committee are
regarded as the city's badge or spiritual symbol of a new-and-developing
city.
Large Sculptures Donated to
Foreign Countries
Some important works include
Monument to Martyrs of Republic of Djibouti
(bronze, in Djibouti People's
Palace, by Li Shouren, 1985), Peace (stone sculpture, in Peace Garden of
Nagasaki, by Pan He, Wang Keqing, Guo Qixiang and Cheng Yunxiang), Opening to
the World (bronze, in International Olympic Committee in Lausanne,
Switzerland, by Tian Jinduo, 1986) and the Statues of Bethune (stone
sculpture, in Montreal of Canada, by Situ Jie, 1986).
Folk Sculpture
and Large Clay Sculpture Group
Various branches
of folk sculpture flourished in modern times, with many outstanding folk artists
emerging. Some famous works include Jiang the Door-God by Zhang Mingshan,
the representative of Niren Zhang (Zhang the clay-figure master in Tianjin),
Zhong Kui in His Sister's Wedding by Zhang Yuting, Xichun Painting
Picture by Zhang Jinghu, wooden figures by Fan Zhenhua in Nanchang of
Jiangxi Province, pottery figures by Liu Chuan in Shiwan of Guangdong Province,
pottery animal statues by Ou Qian, wooden head sculpture by Jiang Jiazou in
Quanzhou of Fujian Province and dough sculptures by Tang zibo, Liu Shao'an and
other people in Beijing. During the 1960s and 1970s, having adopted elements of
folk clay sculpture and working with folk artists, some professional sculptors
created clay group sculptures about class education, among which the
representative is the Yard of Collecting Rent, with 114 clay figures of
true-man size. It is an authentic depiction of peasants' miserable lives before
land reform. Besides, sculptures of similar subject were found in some factories
and mines.
Being greatly
influenced by modern western art, modern Chinese sculpture in the 1980s focused
on barbarism and structuralism. The transformation of concept and the
application of new materials prepared for later development of sculpture. As to
the 1990s, modern sculpture made real major breakthrough, especially the
on-the-shelf sculpture that had become the frontier of Chinese visual
art.
The prominent
progress of Chinese modern sculpture in the 1990s owes to artists' creation and
economic influence. Chinese economy developed rapidly in the 1990s, which
stimulate large-scale city construction; hence the development of city sculpture
became feasible. Culture level represents economic standards. Memorial and
decorative sculptures gave way to more cultural and spiritual public
sculptures.
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