Record ID | harvard_bibliographic_metadata/ab.bib.13.20150123.full.mrc:935612293:2602 |
Source | harvard_bibliographic_metadata |
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LEADER: 02602cam a22003494a 4500
001 013828577-2
005 20131206193053.0
006 m o d
008 110706s2010 cc o d eng d
010 $z 2011381716
020 $a9789888053513
020 $z9789888028122 (hbk.)
020 $z988802812X (hbk.)
040 $aMdBmJHUP$cMdBmJHUP
041 1 $aeng$hchi
050 00 $aPL2967.7.O255$bD8513 2010
100 1 $aXiao, Lu,$d1962-
240 10 $aDui hua.$lEnglish.
245 10 $aDialogue$h[electronic resource] /$cXiao Lu ; translated from the Chinese by Archibald McKenzie.
260 $aHong Kong :$bHong Kong University Press,$c2010.$e(Baltimore, Md. :$fProject MUSE,$g2013)
300 $a1 online resource (xv, 207 p. :)$bill. ;
500 $aTranslation of : Dui hua.
520 $a"What forces continue to oppress and restrain women artists in contemporary China? Some powerful answers are provided in this fictional memoir of Xiao Lu, who played an important role in the avant-garde cultural scene during the tumultuous early months of 1989. The acclaimed "China/AvantGarde" exhibition organized by Gao Minglu at the National Art Museum in Beijing was shut down after about three hours from its opening Feb. 5 1989, when Xiao Lu shot live bullets into her mock-up of two telephone booths, turning an edgy installation work into an over-the-edge performance piece and an icon of the modern Chinese art movement. Many questions were left unanswered from where she got the gun to what she meant by all this. As it turns out, the man and the woman pictured in these two phone booths were specific people, and she was one of them the daughter of the director of a provincial art academy. Her father helped her get into the Central Academy in Beijing, where she was abused in various ways. In the 1989 exhibition, symbolically, she shot her nemesis, then went outside to a public telephone, called him, and told him what she had done. These events are naturally at the center of her memoir, but in describing the events and their aftermath, she offers remarkably candid views on the difficulties facing women in contemporary art circles and the way cultural power is exercised in China."--Publisher description.
546 $aIn English translated from the Chinese.
588 $aDescription based on print version record.
538 $aMode of access: World Wide Web.
600 10 $aXiao, lu,$d1962-$vFiction.
650 0 $aInstallations (Art)$vFiction.
730 0 $aProject Muse UPCC books.$5net
700 1 $aMcKenzie, Archibald.
988 $a20131113
906 $0OCLC