16-17 December 2016
Ink Asia, Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, Hall 3G
DIALOGUES ON INK offers a spotlighted view of the diverse developments in contemporary Chinese ink art. It seeks to situate the current state of ink art within its historical and cultural lineage.
It will be jointly presented by the Art Museum of the Chinese University of Hong Kong and The Ink Society.
Registration is required:
http://www.inkasia.com.hk/index.php/programme/academic-programme/
Session 1: Calligraphy: From Tradition to Innovation
Friday 16 December 11:30am to 1pm
In Cantonese and Mandarin with simultaneous interpretation
- Fung Ming Chip, Artist
- Chui Pui Chee, Artist
- Phil Chan, Research-Assistant Curator (Painting and Calligraphy) of the Art Museum, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
- Wu Kuo Hao, Director and Research Fellow, Ho Chuang-Shih Calligraphy Foundation, Taipei
Moderator: Harold Mok, Chair and Professor, Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
The panel will discuss the development of calligraphy from tradition to innovation. Looking at the practice and through the perspective of the two artists, the discussion will also explore the notion of the written word and its power to serve as a rich terrain for artistic exploration.
Fung Ming Chip
Born in 1951 in Guangdong province, Fung Ming Chip is a self-taught artist. Over the course of his career spanning more than 30 years, Fung has garnered critical acclaim for his calligraphic works, which draw from and reinvent traditional calligraphy with a novel and radical vision. Fung began to invent his own style of calligraphic script in the mid-1990s. By deconstructing and reassembling the lines and strokes of each written character, as well as experimenting with different ink tones and compositional arrangements, Fung has created over one hundred of his own unique scripts.
Fung’s works have been widely exhibited and collected around the world. His works are in the collections of the Hong Museum of Art; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Princeton University Art Museum, New Jersey; Asian Art Museum, San Francisco; Harvard University Art Museum, Cambridge; Ashmolean Museum, Oxford University; among others.
Chui Pui Chee
Born in 1980 in Hong Kong, Chui Pui Chee studied calligraphy with Jat See-Yeu and Wang Dongling. Chui received his BA from the Fine Arts Department, The Chinese University of Hong Kong and PhD from the China Academy of Art, Hangzhou, in 2010. Highly accomplished in a wide range of calligraphy scripts, Chui creates works that are rooted in the calligraphic tradition and yet are contemporary in their approach.
Chui is an executive member of the Jiazi Society of Calligraphy in Hong Kong and Friends of Shizai. He is also a research fellow at the Modern Calligraphy Research Center of China Academy of Art.
In 2015, he joined China Guardian Hong Kong as a specialist in the Chinese paintings and calligraphy department.
Chui has held solo and group exhibitions in Hong Kong. His works are in the public collections of the Hong Kong Museum of Art and the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford University.
Phil Chan
Phil Chan Kwun-nam received his BA, MPhil and PhD from the Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, majoring in the history of Chinese art. Currently, he is the Research-Assistant Curator (painting and calligraphy) of the Art Museum, CUHK. His research interests mainly focus on the Ming, Qing and Modern Chinese calligraphy and painting, including the relation between Chinese poem and painting, and the history of connoisseurship and collecting. The catalogues and publications he has been involved in include, Chinese Painting and Calligraphy (an online catalogue of the Seattle Art Museum, sponsored by the J. Paul Getty Foundation), The Bei Shan Tang Legacy: Chinese Calligraphy, The Bei Shan Tang Legacy: Rubbing of Stone Engraving and Model Calligraphy, Double Beauty III: Qing Dynasty Couplets from the Lechangzai Xuan Collection, and Minghua quanji.
Wu Kuo-Hao
Wu Kuo-Hao received his PhD from the Chinese Culture University in Taipei. His research area focuses mainly on late Ming dynasty calligraphy. He is currently Director and Research Fellow at the Ho Chuang-Shih Calligraphy Foundation, Taipei, as well as Assistant Professor in the Department of Fine Arts at Huafan University, Taipei. In 2010, he was an appraiser at the Asian Civilisations Museum, Singapore. He was a Senior Visiting Scholar at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 2008-2009. Wu has curated numerous exhibitions of calligraphy both within Taiwan and abroad. His writings on calligraphy have been published extensively. He has also edited numerous books, including Zhu Shunshui and The Legacy of Calligraphy in Taiwan. In addition, Wu Kuo-Hao is a calligrapher. In his practice, he seeks to assimilate elements of daily life to create works that are innovative and distinct from traditional calligraphy.
Session 2: Building and Curating Collections in the 21st century
Friday 16 December 3pm to 4:30pm
In Mandarin with simultaneous interpretation
- Lesley Ma - Curator, Ink art, M+, Hong Kong
- Eve Tam, Museum Director, Hong Kong Museum of Art
- Wang Huangsheng, Director, Central Academy of Fine Arts (CAFA) Art Museum, Beijing
- Qing Pan, Deputy Director for Curatorial Affairs and Exhibition Design, National Museum of China, Beijing
Moderator: Josh Yiu, Director, Art Museum, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
This panel will provide an insight into how institutions approach the acquisition / display / presentation of ink art. What are the strategies to relate ‘contemporary ink art’ with ‘traditional ink’? Does your classical collection or gallery space shape the way you collect ‘contemporary ink art’? If so, how?
Lesley Ma
Lesley Ma is Curator, Ink Art at M+, Hong Kong and a recipient of the Fifth Yishu Awards for Critical Writing on Contemporary Chinese Art in 2015. She is planning M+’s first ink art exhibition in fall 2017 at the M+ Pavilion in the West Kowloon Cultural District.
Eve Tam
Eve Tam obtained a BA degree and then an MA degree from the University of Hong Kong in fine arts and in cultural studies in 1991 and 2003 respectively. She also holds a Master’s degree in Museum Studies from the University of Sydney in 2013. In 1994, she received the “Art in Belgium Scholarship” of the Belgian Consulate, Hong Kong and interned with Jan Hoet, curator of Documenta IX, at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Ghent, Belgium. As a recipient of the Lee Hysan Foundation Fellowship 2004, she conducted several internships in the US in 2005. She has worked at various museums including the Museum of Teaware, the Hong Kong Heritage Museum and the Art Promotion Office. Since 2012, she has been Museum Director of the Hong Kong Museum of Art. She has participated in a number of major new museum and art space projects in Hong Kong including the Hong Kong Heritage Museum (1996-2000), the museum at the West Kowloon Cultural District (2008-2012) and the new art space at Oil Street (2010-2012). She is now working on the major renovation project of the Hong Kong Museum of Art.
Wang Huangsheng
Wang Huangsheng has been Director of the CAFA Art Museum since 2009. He is the Founder of the Guangzhou Triennial and CAFAM Biennial. From 2000 to 2009, he was the Director of the Guangdong Museum of Art.
Wang holds an MA (1990) and a PhD (2006) from the Nanjing Art Institute in Art History. His writings have been published extensively in various catalogues and journals both within China and abroad, such as Research on Art and Literature, Art, Art and Observation, Art Trend, Art Gallery Magazine and the Jiangsu Art Monthly. He is also the chief-editor of the Art Museum periodical. His published books include Master painters of the Ming and Qing dynasties – Chen Hongshou (Jilin, 1995) and History of Chinese Painting: Landscape (Jiangxi, 2008).
As a prominent ink artist, Wang has exhibited his work widely. His works are in the collections of the Guangdong Museum of Art; Guangdong Provincial Museum; National Art Museum of China, Beijing; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; among others.
Qing Pan
Qing Pan is presently the deputy director for Curatorial Affairs and Exhibition Design Department at the National Museum of China. After obtaining her PhD from Columbia University in 2007, she returned to China to serve as a curator of modern and contemporary art at the National Art Museum of China. Since then she has organized various regional and international exhibitions including Transforming Marks of Ink: Chinese Contemporary Ink Paintings (2008) at the National Museum in Berlin and the National Museum in Dresden, Crossing: Dialogues for Emergency Architecture (2009) at the National Art Museum in Beijing, Animamix Biennial (2009) at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Shanghai, Trans-Realism: Chinese Contemporary Art (2009) at Christie’s Auction House in New York, and Tales of Two Cities: New York & Beijing at Bruce Museum in Greenwich, USA (2016).
Session 3: The market and collecting - What is the future of contemporary ink art?
Saturday 17 December 11:30am to 12:30pm
In English
- Catherine Maudsley, Independent art advisor, curator and art historian
- Daphne King, Director, Alisan Fine Arts
- Vincent Lo, Collector
- Katharine Don, Deputy Director, Department Head of Contemporary Ink Art, Sotheby’s Hong Kong
Moderator: Olivia Wang, Representative, The Ink Society
The world of collecting contemporary art is constantly shifting. This panel will discuss how collecting contemporary ink art has evolved in recent years. In light of the growing interest in this genre, how are serious collectors, curators, institutions, gallerists and auction houses shaping the landscape of contemporary ink art?
Catherine Maudsley
Catherine Maudsley is a pioneering fine arts professional who has lived in Hong Kong for more than three decades. She works with distinguished collectors worldwide, providing a unique blend of integrated services: collections management, curating, researching, writing and strategic overview. Catherine Maudsley has served on the Executive Committees of the University of Hong Kong Museum Society and the Oriental Ceramic Society Hong Kong and is a Hong Kong Art School Council member.
An independent scholar and advocate of lifelong learning, Catherine Maudsley has lectured for institutions including the Department of Fine Arts at The University of Hong Kong, Christie’s Education, and Sotheby’s Institute of Art and has moderated discussions for the Asia Society, Christie’s Art Forum, L’ÉCOLE Van Cleef & Arpels and many others. She has published widely, including Arts of Asia, the Asian Art Newspaper, Orientations and has contributed to and edited a number of art related books.
Daphne King
Born in America, Daphne has lived in Hong Kong since she was five. She graduated from Philips Academy, Andover, and the University of Pennsylvania with a BA in History. After graduation, she worked in the advertising industry in New York and Hong Kong. In 1996, she joined Alisan Fine Arts and was promoted to Director in 2005; in 2011 she formally took over operations at the gallery. Since then she has curated several landmark exhibitions, including Selected Asian Cultural Council Fellows: Then and Now held at the Asian Cultural Council and Alisan Fine Arts in 2011; Fang Zhaoling, Vigorous and Fresh Chinese Ink Painting held at Fine Art Asia and Alisan Fine Arts in 2012; Rhythms of Creation – Chinyee held at the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Alisan Fine Arts in 2013; Mountainscapes: New Ink Art by Wang Tiande held at Alisan Fine Arts in 2014; The Ink Discipline, A series of rare original prints by Fabienne Verdier held at Alisan Fine Arts in 2014; Yang Jiechang: Good Morning Hong Kong held at the Hong Kong Central Library and Alisan Fine Arts in 2015; A Legacy of Ink: Lui Shou-kwan 40 Years On held at the Hong Kong Arts Centre and Alisan Fine Arts in 2015.
A patron of the arts, Daphne was a Friend of the Hong Kong Museum of Art from 1997–2000 and is currently a Trustee of the Friends. In 2011, she was appointed Director of The Ink Society. Daphne has been a keen supporter of the Hong Kong Ballet since 2002, and was co-chair of the Guild from 2011-2015, she currently is an Executive Member of the board. Since 2015 she has been a patron of Asian Cultural Council Friend’s Circle. She founded the University of Pennsylvania Scholarship Fund in Hong Kong and was the President of the Fund from 2002-2014.
Vincent Lo
Vincent Lo is a lawyer by profession and has served many committees of the HKSAR government and statutory bodies. Currently he is a member of the Advisory Committee on Arts Development under the Home Affairs Bureau and a member of the Museums Advisory Committee under the Leisure and Cultural Services Department. He is also the Vice Chairman of the M Plus Board and its Acquisition Committee. He is a director of the Ink Society and he collects Chinese classical paintings and calligraphy as well as contemporary ink art works.
Katherine Don
Katherine Don joined Sotheby’s in 2014 as the Department Head of Contemporary Ink Art in Asia. Prior to joining Sotheby’s Hong Kong, Katherine was an art advisor specialising in contemporary Chinese art. From 2013 to 2014, she was a key contributor to Sotheby’s contemporary Ink sales in New York and Hong Kong as a consultant. For nine years, Katherine established and directed RedBox Studio Ltd, an art advisory firm for private collectors of contemporary Asian art. Her curatorial activities in Beijing, New York, Canada, and Spain had a consistent focus on works on paper, including contemporary Chinese ink painting. Born in Hawaii, Katherine holds a dual-degree in Art History and East Asian Studies from Barnard College, Columbia University, and received a Master’s degree from UCLA Anderson School of Management.
Session 4: Ink art and its development in mainland China, HK and Taiwan
Saturday 17 December 3pm to 4:30pm
In Mandarin with simultaneous interpretation
- Pan Gongkai, Artist, scholar and former President of CAFA
- Chia Chi Jason Wang, Independent curator and art critic
- Zhang Yu, Artist
- Wang Tiande, Artist
- Leung Kui Ting, Artist
Moderator: Zhou Jin, Associate Professor, Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong
The panel will discuss the development of ink art, tracing the cultural and historical changes over the past decades, in different countries. Regional trends, differences, and perspectives towards the ink painting tradition will be explored.
Pan Gongkai
Born in 1947, Pan Gongkai studied in the Department of Chinese Painting at the Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts (now China Academy of Art). As a distinguished scholar, artist and educator, he has played an important role in the country’s artistic and intellectual life. He previously served as President at the Central Academy of Fine Arts (2001-2014) and China Academy of Art (1996-2001).
Pan Gongkai has written widely on modern Chinese art. A fervent advocate of China’s own artistic traditions, Pan has researched extensively the relationship between Chinese and Western art in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries.
Pan Gongkai’s works have been exhibited extensively both within China and abroad. Most recently, he has had solo exhibitions at the San Diego Museum of Art (2015), Frye Art Museum, Seattle (2014), and the Today Art Museum, Beijing (2013). In 2011, his work was included in the China pavilion at the Venice Biennale. His works are in the collections of the National Art Museum of China, Beijing; National Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall, Taipei; Asian Art Museum, San Francisco; among others.
Chia Chi Jason Wang
Born in 1961, Chia Chi Jason Wang lives and works in Taiwan as a curator and art critic. He was the curator of the Taiwan Biennial 2008, the Taiwan Pavilion at the 51st International Art Exhibition of the Biennale of Venice 2005, and the 9th International Architecture Exhibition of the Biennale of Venice 2004. He also worked as co-curator of the 2002 Taipei Biennial Great Theatre of the World.
He has curated over thirty exhibitions since 1998. Beginning in 1992, he has contributed widely to various art catalogs and Chinese and English magazines. He also served on the Academic Advisory Board of Asia Art Archive from 2004 to 2009.
He graduated from the English Department of Fu-Jen Catholic University (BA, 1984), the Institute of Fine Arts of Chinese Culture University (MA in Art History, 1986), and the Group in Asian Studies of the University of California at Berkeley (MA, 1991).
Zhang Yu
Born in Tianjin in 1959, Zhang Yu graduated from the Tianjin Academy of Arts and Crafts in 1988. Recognised as both a scholar and artist, Zhang is an important figure in the establishment and development of experimental ink painting. His early nonfigurative series, Divine Light, created in the 1990s, was considered a breakthrough as it obliterated most traces of the brushwork. His is also well known for his Fingerprint series, installation and performance works, which abandon the brush completely and go beyond traditional representations of ink.
Over the last two decades, Zhang Yu’s works have been extensively exhibited both within China and internationally. His works are in the collections of the Hong Kong Museum of Art; Chengdu Modern Art Museum; National Art Museum of China, Beijing; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Benetton Museum, Venice; Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark; and the Chinese Culture Center, San Francisco.
Wang Tiande
Born in Shanghai in 1960, Wang Tiande graduated from the Chinese Paintings Department of Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts (now China Academy of Art) in 1988 and later obtained a PhD from its Calligraphy Department.
Since as early as the 1980s, Wang has embraced the abstract expressive potential of ink painting. His work often takes as its source classical landscapes and calligraphy, but Wang upends traditional forms in his work. In his celebrated Digital series, he replaces the brush and instead uses a cigarette or incense stick to burn the paper, creating a unique pictorial language. Wang has also incorporated additional layers in his compositions in the form of stone rubbings.
Wang Tiande’s works are in the collections of the Hong Kong Museum of Art; National Art Museum of China, Beijing; Shanghai Art Museum; Shenzhen Art Museum; Guangdong Art Museum, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; British Museum, London; Spencer Museum of Art, Kansas University; Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Berkeley Art Museum; among others.
Leung Kui Ting
Born in 1945 in Guangzhou, Leung Kui Ting moved to Hong Kong at the age of 3. At 19, he began his studies in painting under Lui Shou-kwan. He later took graphic design classes with Wucius Wong. Leung has experimented with multiple media and techniques since the 1960s, including ink, oil, woodcut, sculpture and graphic design. He has focused on painting with ink since the mid-1980s. Influenced by his background in design, Leung focuses on the structural elements and compositions of his works. In his ink paintings, he combines traditional brushwork with geometric lines and shapes. In his recent oeuvre, Leung assimilates the technological vocabulary of the digital age into his landscapes to create a distinct artistic language.
Leung Kui Ting’s work have been collected by the Hong Kong Museum of Art; Hong Kong Heritage Museum; Museu Luis de Camoes, Macau; and Ashmolean Museum, Oxford University.