Power Station of Art

Last call was to the Power Station of Art, a state-run contemporary art museum opened in 2012.

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Yuz Museum

We went to the Yuz Museum which is a converted aviation factory built by the Russians in an area of the city where the authorities have invited entrepreneurs to open private museums.   The museum opened in 2014, designed by Sou Fujimoto:-

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We began with the Rain Room by Random International where we got gently soaked:-

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K11 (2)

We went to the K11 shopping mall in downtown Shanghai to see the exhibition they have done on the influence of Salvador Dali on modern Chinese art, a collaboration with the Dali Museum in Figueres, an appropriate use of the space, given the theatrical and crossover nature of Dali’s career and work:-

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Then we had lunch:-

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Zhang Huan

We went out to Zhang Huan’s studio in an old hydraulics factory in the far distant outskirts of Shanghai:-

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He came out to greet us:-

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Long Museum

I had been before to the Long Museum, just before it opened eighteen months or so ago.   It’s an impressive, large scale, concrete structure based on surviving industrial remains.   What I hadn’t expected was a scholarly exhibition in the basement devoted to The Imperial Art of the High Qing, art which survives in Chinese private collections from the reigns of three Emperors – Kangxi, Yongzheng and Qianlong.   What wasn’t clear was where the works had been during the cultural revolution.   Were they hidden or have they been bought back from the west ?

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Shanghai

Off to Shanghai.   By the standards of Hong Kong, a huge, messy, amorphous megalopolis, with a population of 25 million spread across the delta of the River Yangtse and a long drive in from the airport.   It’s hard to believe the ups and downs of its history:  settled by  the British after the Treaty of Nanking in 1842, foreign men, according to the guidebook, ‘found sexual solace in service professionals’;  they were joined by the French and Americans and the Sassoons and Kedouries from Baghdad;  then the Japanese came after the Sino-Japanese war of 1895 and the White Russians after 1917.   The Japanese took over in 1937, the Americans on 15 August 1945, and the Communists on 25 May 1949.   Now, under the Communists, it is once again the ultimate capitalist city.

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