“Ai Weiwei ‘Literally’ Smashes China’s Traditions in Art and Architecture” - Really?!

Posted by Wencheng Yan on Jan 4th, 2008

Ai Weiwei, a contemporary Chinese artist, was widely reported to “literally” destroy China’s tradition in art in his 1995 act of dropping a Han Dynasty (206 BCE - 220 CE) urn and breaking it. An article calls this performance “an iconoclastic act”. Ai was quoted as saying that this gesture is “powerful only because someone thinks it’s powerful and invests value in the object.” (Check Visualarts, Cornell for the image and the article and also Artzinechina for a fuller article about the artist in question).

The article continues: “The urn is valuable only because the arbiters of taste and the art market have determined that this is so. In recording the act of its destruction, the meaning and value of the urn is transformed and co–opted into a contemporary, editioned art work that subverts and disrupts the prevailing value system to which it previously belonged.”

I am only highly suspicious of this kind of act towards their ends – whatever they are – because it rings so alarmingly similar to the rationale to destroy ancient architecture in 1950s’ Beijing (back to my topic of course). “When they decided to dismantle and demolish the city’s menlous (gate/ entrance towers) and pailous (ceremonial archways) in the 1950s, the government would gather the public in front of these structures to ‘denounce them for their evils’” (Fang, Ke. Contemporary Redevelopment in the Inner City of Beijing, 2000).

The predecessors of Chinese architecture scholars in China, who usually are also defenders of this millennia-long form of art, have had to combat ignorance about what we call “Chinese architecture”. Now the task is harder and the burden heavier. Prof. Ruan Yisan of Tongji University who works on historic preservation in China, continually talks about the need to “educate the policy-makers”, about the meaning and significance of respecting and preserving traditional architecture. But it seems that the existence of Chinese architecture at present is a complicated issue involving a power struggle between a), greedy and powerful real estate developers, contractors and expropriators, corrupt government officials, the so-called master architects and architectural firms who care more about garnering money and fame than anything else, b), responsible individuals who appreciate the historic, cultural, scientific and aesthetic values of these ancient structures. Guess who loses in this struggle?! It might be an achievable goal to “educate the policy-makers”, to make laws and regulations and to even execute them in China. But how do we defend the Chinese architectural heritage against the darkest human nature of vanity, greed and vulgarity?

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Bibliography_Part IV: Historic Preservation/ Heritage Conservation

Posted by Wencheng Yan on Dec 30th, 2007

Luo, Zhewen. Luo Zhewen lishi wenhua mingcheng yu gujianzhu baohu wenji/ 罗哲文历史文化名城与古建筑保护文集 [Essays on Preservation of Historic Cities and Ancient Architecture]

Fang, Ke. Contemporary Redevelopment in the Inner City of Beijing: Survey, Analysis and Investigation, Beijing: Zhongguo jianzhu gongye chubanshe, 2000.

Wu, Liangyong. Rehabilitating the Old City of Beijing: a Project in the Ju’er Hutong Neighborhood, Vancouver: UBC Press, 1999.

Wang, Jun. Cheng Ji/城记 [Tale of the City], Beijing: Shenghuo dushu xinzhi sanlian shudian, 2003.

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Disappearing vernacular architecture - Beijing Hutongs

Posted by Wencheng Yan on Aug 28th, 2007

I was back in Beijing for about six weeks this summer, and things were getting worse. Whole neighborhoods of hutongs (traditional Beijing alleyways) are still being demolished, ancient residences gone, while new building projects are under way. Below are some pictures I took outside of the Qianmen area (almost right in the heart of old Beijing, see map below), where Dajiang Hutong and Xianyukou Hutong are being destroyed. The irony about the destruction is that the developers, while doing away with these ancient alleyways, put up photos and (prints of) paintings of the old hutongs and residences as they were and are supposed to be, on the billboards that they erected to cover up what’s going on behind them.

Photo of Old Beijing’s Hutong

 

Photos and Prints of Old Beijing

A sign indicating the name of the hutong (Dajiang Hutong) with guards petrolling and stopping visitors from going into the hutongs.

Dajiang Hutong with guards

And this is what’s behind the billboards.

Behind the Billboards

Behind the Billboards 2

Another ancient alleyway, Xianyukou Hutong, is suffering the same fate.

Xianyukou Hutong, suffering the same fate.

Below is a map that shows where Qianmen (the Front Gate) area is in Beijing. Xianyukou Hutong is shown as Xianyukou St, just a little south of the Gate:

Qianmen area of Beijing



Living in the Vernacular

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