PRINCETON ALUMNI WEEKLY
MARCH 26, 2003: FEATURE
Art
exhibition offers new perspectives on familiar works
BY DAVID MARCUS 92
As an art student in Beijing
in the 1960s, Zhang Hongtu was taught to paint "from the
eye, not the brain." He and his peers were told to depict
exactly what they saw, not to express their feelings about what
they were painting. Zhang recalls that while he was a student,
the National Gallery in Beijing put on a show of works created
by Chinese artists before 1949, the year Mao Zedong and the Communists
took control of China. Called the "negative education exhibition,"
the show had one instructional purpose: to show the kinds of works
students were not to make.
Ellen Harveys experience
of museums as a Harvard undergraduate in the 1980s was entirely
different: "I wanted to own all the things in the museum,
or make something better." Like many students, she copied
paintings in order to learn from them. For one class, she was
told to copy a work by the French Impressionist Pierre-Auguste
Renoir, never a favorite of hers. "It was supposed to be
a morally improving experience," she says.
Both Zhang and Harvey, as well
as artists Sanford Biggers and Anne Chu, consider museums and
the traditions they enshrine in "Shuffling the Deck: The
Collection Reconsidered," which will run from March 29 through
June 29 in the Princeton University Art Museum. The only criterion
for the works in the show is that they be inspired by pieces in
Princetons permanent collection. The new works by the four
artists all of whom are based in New York will be
installed within the permanent galleries. In that way, the project
allows the museum both to supplement its holdings in contemporary
art, and to offer new perspectives on existing works, according
to Susan M. Taylor, the museum director.
The exhibition aims to show visitors
"what its like to see the museum through an artists
eyes," says guest curator Eugenie Tsai, formerly senior curator
at the Whitney Museum of American Art. "I tried to think
of artists whose work was open to work from different cultures
and artists to whom the history of art was very pertinent. When
you see a museum through an artists eyes, you see that there
are other ways of arranging a museum and making connections"
between things that have been compartmentalized.
Chu contributes four original
cast-bronze and fabric sculptures based on pre-Columbian and Han
Dynasty ceramic figures in the collection. Biggerss works
connect pieces in Princetons collection with aspects of
contemporary culture. One of his pieces is an oversized winter
jacket with feathers on the outside, inspired by a feathered African
tunic he noticed on a trip through the museum. "Upon seeing
that piece, I was struck by its physicality and material,"
he says. "In Harlem, I see all these guys with these big
goose-feather jackets. These guys, 500 or 600 years ago, could
have been wearing that tunic."
The shows locale at a teaching
museum was fundamental to Harveys piece. "I wanted
to use the museum as a student," Harvey says. "As an
artist, you learn by going and copying." After looking through
the collection, she chose to copy a painting of Venus by Lucas
Cranach, a 16th-century German artist and ally of Martin Luther.
"The project is all about desire and the desirable object,
and Venus is the quintessential desirable object," she says.
Harveys exercise isnt
as simple as bringing in an easel, canvas, and paint and getting
to work. Like all artists who want to copy a work in Princetons
collection, Harvey had to sign a contract in which she agreed
not to sell her piece, which must be at least 10 percent bigger
or smaller than the original. When Harvey finishes the copy, it
will hang in the museum where Cranachs Venus and Amor does
now. Museum-goers who notice the copy of the Cranach painting
instead of the original may pause and ponder the museum as an
institution. "The whole idea of a museum is a bizarre one,"
Harvey says. "The things in museums all had functions, and
those functions have atrophied." Consider Cranachs
painting, which was made for a private patron: "The last
thing he intended was that it hang out for the delight of Princeton
undergraduates," Harvey says.
Zhangs four paintings for
the show are part of a project hes been working on for the
last four years, in which he paints scenes depicted in Chinese
landscape drawings in the styles of Paul Cézanne, Claude
Monet, and Vincent Van Gogh. "I feel like Im an actor.
Today Im Van Gogh; tomorrow Im Monet," says Zhang,
who immigrated to the U.S. in 1982. The works aim to "blur
the boundaries between Chinese and Western culture," he says.
Knowing that Monets Lilies
and Japanese Bridge is one of Princetons most famous works,
Zhang went to the museum with a request: "I was looking for
a bridge. If I want to combine Monet and a Chinese painting, I
have to find something in common. The difference is already there."
After combing through the museums collection of Chinese
paintings, he found a Ming dynasty fan painting by Shen Chou that
has a simple bridge in the middle.
Zhang contravened Monets
practice of painting from life by bringing his canvas to Princeton
to study the Japanese bridge, whose greenish hues he especially
wanted to match. But, notes Zhang, the Chinese artists he imitates
never painted from life; they worried about a works relationship
to its predecessors. And, he adds, "Cézanne said that
when you want to learn, you go to a museum."
David Marcus 92 is a frequent
PAW contributor.