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'West meets East' unleashed

By Hong Xiao/Kong Wenzheng | China Daily | Updated: 2019-12-13 09:24

Visitors browse an artwork featuring the state dinner that former US president Richard Nixon had during his historic trip to China at Art Basel Miami Beach on Dec 4 at the Miami Beach Convention Center. This year, 269 of the world's leading modern and contemporary art galleries display artworks by more than 4,000 artists at the fair through Dec 8.[Photo by Hong Xiao/China Daily]

Seeing more contemporary Chinese artists making their debut on the international stage, Alexis Hubshman, founder and president of the Scope show, says, "It was something that was evolving organically as China itself becomes a powerful engine, and its soft power mandate of bringing culture and art across the oceans and borders is something that is coming to bear.

"It took some of us a long time to notice this, but certainly, in the art world, as the market itself began to pick up, there is more of a consistent influx," he adds.

Wang Chunchen, deputy director of the CAFA Art Museum and renowned art critic and curator, attended Miami Art Week for the first time, comments: "Actually there are many great Chinese artists, but their artworks are not shown here-they're not really known to the world."

Wang says contemporary art is one of the best ways to understand what is happening in real life in China and around the world, noting that China is quite different now.

"Today's China is a new China," he says, adding that through contemporary art, which underlines modern thinking, artists can help build an image of a new China, "not the China you learned from newspapers and television", but through artworks that are built on real life.

Asked if the distinctive Chinese narrative has been somewhat left behind in the artistry of contemporary Chinese art, Wang says even as heritage and tradition have always been emphasized, "it's impossible for people to come back and remake the past".

Cohen praises China's efforts in art education, which is providing young students with a broader, more global vision. And as he points out, the art-collecting market is booming in China as well.

"Ten or 15 years ago, there were not many Chinese collectors-so few that you could count them on one hand," Cohen says.

"Now today, with the internet boom and the wealth that it can bring, there are many more millionaires and young entrepreneurs in China, and they are beginning to collect."

Cohen says he is glad to see the Chinese government embracing contemporary art.

"They've realized it's soft power, it's culture, it's something that's important to the world."

And at a time when China and the United States are in a trade dispute, Cohen says, "Art can basically break through any barrier. No matter where we are, art is something we're all going to understand and appreciate."

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