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As
part of Reel China: Chinese New Documentary Film Festival,
Chambers Fine Art will be showing a series of eleven documentary
films from 15 to 20 May, 2001. The festival organizer, R.E.C.
Foundation Inc., has selected documentaries made in the last
decade by artists from mainland China on a wide variety of
topics, ranging from changes in artistic policy to family
planning, from minority matters to the legal system.
The films vividly and faithfully portray
the transformations of China during the last hundred years,
with an emphasis on the last two decades after China adopted
open-door policies. Filmed in many areas of China, these
documentaries range in territory from its capital city Beijing
to its most southwest province Yunnan, from the Yangtse River
at the heart of China to its remote Tibetan provinces. No
matter where the stories take place, they provide an unusually
close look at ordinary Chinese people, whose lives are easily
overlooked.
Kubert Leung analyzes paintings produced
from 1966 to 1976 in Art in the Cultural Revolution, revealing
Mao's strategy of using art for political purposes. Ten
years later, a new generation of Chinese artists expressed
their anxiety and frustrations in the newest art form in
the contemporary Chinese art world - Performance Art, as
documented in Chinese Avant-Garde Performance Art from 1986
to 2000. Filmed in widely dispersed parts of China, Jiang
Yue's A River Stilled explores the fatal change in a
couple's life while building the hydraulic station at
the Three Gorges on the Yangtse River, and Zhu Xiaoqing's
20 Wei Hai Road, reflects the gradual changes in the People's
Square in Shanghai over the last century. Romantic Lake and
Baka Village reveal the mysterious lives of those who follow
their ancestor's traditional living styles in isolated
areas of China. The conflicts and struggles occasioned by
their encounters with "modernity" and "civilization," expose
questions of preservation and renovation.
The simple, straightforward languages used
in these documentary films provide a glimpse into modern
China through the eyes of "ordinary people" (lao baixing),
and show the wide variety of lifestyles and problems that
China is facing during its massive economical, political
and cultural transitions.
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