An Artistic Exile: A Life of Feng Zikai (1898-1975)

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University of California Press, 2002 M12 3 - 471 pages
This engrossing book, a brilliant blend of biography and criticism, tells the story of Feng Zikai (1898-1975), one of the most gifted and important artists to emerge from the politically tumultuous decades of the 1920s and 1930s. Barmé provides a closely woven parallel history, that of the life of writer-artist Feng, who was also an essayist and a translator, and that of China's turbulent twentieth century. He investigates Feng Zikai's aesthetic vision, its development, and how it relates to traditional and contemporary Chinese cultural values and debates.

Although Feng was known for his so-called casual drawings, he was reluctant to classify his art. According to Barmé, much of his writing and painting was rooted in a philosophy of self-expression. Difficult to position in relation to existing Chinese political and social nomenclature, Feng remains, to a large extent, an enigma. He was sympathetic to the average person and the impoverished peasant, yet he was a romantic, and often identified with the increasingly politicized intelligentsia. A devout Buddhist, he was a close observer of nature and children, and while his art appeared gentle, it often carried a strong message.

Much has been written about Feng Zikai, a figure who has become popular among elite and mass audiences in the Chinese world once more, but no other work has examined his place among May Fourth writers and intellectuals nor his position within the context of China's artistic, religious, and literary tradition. An Artistic Exile moves straight to the heart of debates surrounding modernization, religion, science, the essence of a tradition in an age of colonial modernity, and the ethos of political and social thought in twentieth-century China.
 

Contents

Taking Nature as Master
13
Journey to the East
47
The Artist and His Epithet
72
New Paintings for Old Poems
98
The Cult of the Child
128
Protecting Life and Preserving the Self
157
Marketplace and Mountains
191
A Chinese Perspective
236
The Artist Liberated
270
Belated Blossoming
313
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About the author (2002)

Geremie R. Barmé is a Professor at the Research School of Pacific and Asian Studies, Institute of Advanced Studies, at the Australian National University. He is the editor of East Asian History and is author of In the Red (1999), Shades of Mao: The Posthumous Cult of the Great Leader (1996), and coeditor of New Ghosts, Old Dreams: Chinese Rebel Voices (1992). He was also an associate director and writer for the film The Gate of Heavenly Peace (Boston 1995), and is codirecting with Carma Hinton and Richard Gordon Morning Sun, a documentary film on the Chinese Cultural Revolution.

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