. Solar Energy News .




.
SINO DAILY
US museums walk tightrope after China arrest
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) May 28, 2011

US museums are facing delicate choices as they strive to meet a growing interest in China, cooperating with counterparts across the Pacific despite alarm over the detention of top artist Ai Weiwei.

Directors of museums across the United States said in interviews that they found a strong public appetite for work from China, with Americans eager to see everything from ancient treasures to modern art from the rising Asian power.

But the US art world has also led calls to free Ai. One of China's most provocative artists, Ai had been begrudgingly tolerated but was seized in April and accused of tax evasion as Beijing mounts a sweeping crackdown on dissent.

The Milwaukee Art Museum on June 11 opens a major exhibition of Chinese art that features more than 90 objects -- many long hidden from public view -- made for the 18th-century Qianlong emperor and kept inside the Forbidden City.

The exhibition is a collaboration with China's Palace Museum, which worked with the Peabody Essex Museum in Massachusetts on the three-stop tour that also stopped at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Dan Keegan, director of the Milwaukee Art Museum, said his institution's "Summer of China" was aimed at the general public and would include discussions touching on many aspects of Chinese art and culture -- including Ai's case.

Keegan said he considered the museum to be a "forum for public understanding rather than a platform for academic protest."

"The museum's role is to build bridges, not walls. In this country, conversation is better than self-censorship," he said.

A very different dilemma is facing the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, which recently decided to acquire work by Ai -- two chairs crafted from solid marble -- that it now has on temporary license.

Director Hugh Davies said the museum was recently told by the shipping intermediary that the chairs -- which are on display and popular among visitors -- needed to be returned to China.

"It might just be a bureaucratic snafu, but I would guess it probably isn't," Davies said.

"It's our intention to keep these chairs and we will fight vigorously with that goal in mind. But we also don't want to do anything that would deepen Ai Weiwei's problems or lengthen his incarceration, so we have to tread very carefully," he said.

Davies said the chairs showed "exquisite craftsmanship" and hailed Ai as a historic figure in art.

"This is the equivalent of Andy Warhol or Jasper Johns being arrested without charges and then being accused of tax evasion or something like that," Davies said.

Ai's best-known works include "Sunflower Seeds," an exhibition at London's Tate Modern of millions of seemingly identical but in fact unique mini-sculptures.

In Munich, Ai arranged thousands of backpacks in a poignant reminder of the children killed in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake due to what many parents said was shoddy construction.

British novelist Hari Kunzru, writing Saturday in The Guardian, called Ai's detention "a watershed moment for the international art world."

He called the case "the equivalent of the moral tests so badly flunked by technology companies like Cisco and Yahoo when faced with the dizzying financial vistas of the Chinese market."

Museums led by New York's Guggenheim issued a petition for Ai's release that was signed by more than 130,000 people on the activist site change.org.

But Melissa Chiu, museum director at the Asia Society in New York, said she had not seen any hesitation from US institutions about dealing with China and argued that too much pressure could hurt Ai.

"If anything, I believe most museums see the need for such exhibitions more than ever to understand Chinese history or contemporary culture," she said.

Some 130 pieces from the Forbidden City will go on display starting in September at the Louvre in Paris.

China also agreed in May to send some 200 works from the Forbidden City in 2014 to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, which separately this year is showcasing another leading contemporary artist, Xu Bing.

Virginia museum director Alex Nyerges, who has worked for years on Chinese art, said Chinese museum professionals were second to none and that it would be a mistake to see them as simply part of the state apparatus.

Noting that his own museum was publicly supported, Nyerges said: "Those of us who work in cultural institutions don't define ourselves first as an agency of the government. We are an agency, but we are first and foremost an art museum."

"The amount of misinformation in both the United States and China about our respective cultures is highly unfortunate, and considerable. And the major way we can bridge this lack of understanding is through art and culture," he said.




Related Links
China News from SinoDaily.com

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



SINO DAILY
Locke vows to raise rights concerns with China
Washington (AFP) May 26, 2011
Gary Locke, the nominee to be the next US ambassador to China, promised Thursday he would be a forceful advocate for human rights while still seeking broad cooperation with Beijing. Locke, the commerce secretary who would be the first Chinese-American ambassador to Beijing, enjoyed an unusually friendly reception at his Senate hearing, with lawmakers saying he was virtually sure to win confi ... read more


SINO DAILY
Study details path to sustainable aviation biofuels industry in Northwest

New sustainable bio-derived jet fuel industry is achievable

Teaching algae to make fuel

Aviation biofuels for Australia?

SINO DAILY
Guide vests robotic navigation aids for the visually impaired

Controlling robotic arms is child's play

Researchers demonstrate autonomous robots able to explore and map buildings

Tiny robots map buildings -- without help

SINO DAILY
Windpower 2011 highlights industry trends and job creation

Google backs wind energy in California desert

Evolutionary lessons for wind farm efficiency

Global warming won't harm wind energy production, climate models predict

SINO DAILY
New fuel efficiency labels for cars coming

When fueling up means plugging in

Obama orders US agencies to buy green vehicles

Battery Team Working to Drive Electric Vehicles from Niche to Mass Market

SINO DAILY
China hits back at Vietnam over territorial spat

Shell says 27,580 barrels of oil spills in Nigeria in 2010

Using the energy in oil shale without releasing carbon dioxide in a greenhouse world

Aggressive Efficiency and Electrification Needed to Cut California Emissions

SINO DAILY
New form of girl's best friend is lighter than ever

2 graphene layers may be better than 1

Diamonds shine in quantum networks

Climate Change From Black Carbon Depends On Altitude

SINO DAILY
New Jersey ditches carbon cap and trade

Report: California can reach emission goal

Micronesia takes on Czech power plant over emissions

Iraq to fuel generators to head off power protests

SINO DAILY
Destruction of Brazil's Atlantic Forest falls 55%: study

Global Warming May Affect the Capacity of Trees to Store Carbon

Brazil farm interests score one against forest protection

Environmentalist husband, wife shot dead in Brazil


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement