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Westchester County Business Journal • ARTSWNEWS thisandthatbyjl.com


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ArtsWNews, your guide to the arts and culture in Westchester County, NY is published by ARTSWESTCHESTER, a private, not-for-profit organization established in 1965. The largest of its kind in New York State, it serves more than 150 cultural organizations, 43 school districts, hundreds of artists, and audiences numbering over one million. Our goal is to ensure the availability, accessibility, and diversity of the arts in Westchester.


Janet Langsam, Chief Executive Officer Salina Le Bris, Director of Communications Mary Alice Franklin, ArtsWNews Editor Vanessa Reitz & Clare Maker, Designers Lisa DiCarlucci, Calendar Editor Alison Kattleman, News in Brief Editor


For more information about ArtsWestchester, please call 914.428.4220 or visit www.artswestchester.org.


Our work is made possible with support from Westchester County Government.


Robert P. Astorino, County Executive Kenneth W. Jenkins, Chair, Westchester County Board of Legislators Westchester County Board of Legislators


Catherine Borgia Gordon A. Burrows David B. Gelfarb Peter Harckham Michael Kaplowitz James Maisano


Sheila Marcotte Judith A. Myers Virginia Perez William J. Ryan MaryJane Shimsky Michael J. Smith


Bernice Spreckman John G. Testa Alfreda A. Williams Lyndon Williams


Thanks to our generous sponsors: A&A Maintenance Enterprise, Inc., Benerofe Properties Corp., Con Edison, Entergy, Ethan Allen Interiors, First Niagara, IBM, Jacob Burns Foundation, John Meyer Consulting PC, Joseph & Sophia Abeles Foundation, JP Morgan Chase, Key Bank, The Liman Foundation, The Margaret Cargill Foundation, MAXX Properties, Morgan Stanley Smith Barney, New York Power Authority, Nordstrom, Peckham Industries, Inc., PepsiCo, Inc., Reader’s Digest Association, Inc., Reckson, A Division of SL Green Realty, Ronald McDonald House Charities, RPW Group, Swiss Re, Target, TD Charitable Foundation, Wells Fargo Bank, Westchester Magazine


O 1683 R Zhang Huan, Family Tree, 2000 ARTSWESTCHESTER: YOUR COMPLETE ARTS GUIDE


RISING DRAGON By Janet Langsam


The eyes of the world seem to be on Chongqing, where politics, corruption and art exist side by side. It was the municipality governed until recently by Bo Xilai, a prominent Chinese party official who was high up in the succession chain before his wealth and political ties became a notorious issue in the Chinese hierarchy. As well, he has been the center of a political intrigue in which his wife has been accused of murder. Also connected to Chongqing is Zhang Xiao, a former newspaper photographer in this city, whose work provides a visual commentary on the price of progress in China. His series on Three Gorges, a major new dam built to stem the flow of the Yankze River, depicts the displacement and destruction created by the project. He is one of 36 photographers working in their homeland, whose sometimes raw and complex images excite and startle viewers at the exhibition Rising Dragon at the Katonah Museum.


Zhang Huan is another internationally celebrated artist whose performance-art- based photographs present a China steeped in tradition and ritual, yet confused and uncomfortable with societal changes. Take for instance his identity quest that greets visitors to the museum. In a progressive series of self portraits, his face is covered with calligraphy, which finally morphs into a face completely obliterated by black paint as the day ebbs and ends.


Many images in the show deal with today’s China and the conflict between its rigid Communist legacy and its future as a modern economic power – a transformation that is taking place with rapidity and social unrest and with the accumulation of wealth by party leaders on the back of economic prosperity. Referencing the work in the catalog, curator Miles Barth says, “I see it as organized chaos. It’s like China itself – a mass of humanity going in every direction at the speed of light.”


All of that makes the show timely, powerful, deeply thoughtful and gutsy. These are artists who are giving us a rare view of the tumultuous transformation of China, which is born out in the news by acts of violence, vision and daring – one of which is playing out as I write. Mr. Chen Guangcheng, a blind Chinese human rights advocate, considered a dissident in his own country, has arrived safely in the United States after years of forced imprisonment and a daring escape. The thing that struck me most about the exhibition is the sheer bravery of the Chinese artists as they depict the volatility in their homeland through some of the most amazing images that take the art of photography into a new realm.


For many reasons, this exhibition is a must see; not the least of these are the sheer artistry of the images and the raw spirit of the artists working in a part of the world where free expression is not simply a given fact. Artists are known for this sort of undercover, astute bravado in the face of making their art in an oppressive society. What I love about this exhibition is the fact that it brings into sharp focus one of the ways in which art excels in doing what no other form of endeavor can do quite as effectively. Arts explains. It provokes. It presents ideas. It intriques. It brings to the fore hidden meanings. It stimulates discussion. It speaks differently to different people. It does what art does. It gives meaning to the world around us.


JUNE 2012


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