Seminars by Lauren Walden
University of Bristol East Asian History Seminar. May 2021
Coventry University , March 2016
Conference Presentations by Lauren Walden
International Society of the Study of Surrealism Annual Conference, 2022
THE 24TH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE OF THE EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION FOR CHINESE STUDIES, 2022
Through case studies of Zhao Shou and Sha Qi, who encountered surrealism whilst studying abroad i... more Through case studies of Zhao Shou and Sha Qi, who encountered surrealism whilst studying abroad in Japan and Belgium respectively during the Republican Era (1911-1949), I hope to show that surrealist activity in Maoist China did not aim to question Communism as a political system, but rather lament the restrictions upon individual expression that socialist realism and, later the Cultural Revolution, would place upon an artist’s creative practice. Zhao Shou was a political prisoner of the Maoist regime, sent down to the countryside in 1958 where he continued his Surrealist practice clandestinely. Conversely, Sha Qi was a psychological prisoner in Mao’s China, diagnosed with schizophrenia and confined to his hometown, his artistic talents scorned. For the CCP, Zhao Shou’s political approval of land reform and gender equality was marred by aesthetic non-conformity, too much of his individual psyche on display. Sha Qi attempted to reconcile his fantasy of becoming a provincial leader with inner desires that manifested themselves through the genre of the nude and other automatic drawings upon propaganda newspapers. He displayed a particular penchant for the biblical figure of Salomé, a potential allegory for Jiang Qing. The oeuvre of both artists chimes with the Surrealist notion of ‘Independent Revolutionary Art’ (1938) whereby individual freedom of expression would pave the way for political change. Yet, this was precisely what the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) wished to avoid; Out of all western avant-garde movements, Surrealism, despite sympathising with communist principles, ostensibly posed the biggest threat to the CCP.
Mixed Cities and Cosmopolitanism in the first half of the Twentieth Century, Tel Aviv University ... more Mixed Cities and Cosmopolitanism in the first half of the Twentieth Century, Tel Aviv University Israel, Online. May 2021
World War Two and Urban Reconstruction in the Socialist World, University of Leicester, online. D... more World War Two and Urban Reconstruction in the Socialist World, University of Leicester, online. December 2020.
Surrealism officially entered China in 1932 when the Storm Society cited the ‘dreamscapes of Surr... more Surrealism officially entered China in 1932 when the Storm Society cited the ‘dreamscapes of Surrealism’ as a pivotal influence on their artistic practice. One of their key torch bearers, Pang Xunqin, had encountered Surrealism first-hand in Paris where he studied abroad. Similarly, the Chinese Independent Art Association mounted a Surrealist-inspired exhibition in 1935 containing works particularly reminiscent of Picasso and Dali. Whilst the painterly reception of Surrealism in China was highly significant, in terms of dissemination, the photographic medium penetrated the public psyche to a greater extent, whether formally identified as Surrealist or otherwise. Although a cosmopolitan metropolis, the cityscape of Shanghai had fallen victim to rising nationalist sentiment due to the belligerent activity of Japan culminating in the Sino-Japanese war from 1937 to 1945. These political events alongside the hedonistic nature of Shanghai nightlife were mercilessly satirised in copious photomontages published in Shanghai Manhua (Modern Miscellany). The most popular periodical of the era Liangyou (the young companion), with a run of 50,000 copies per issue, also produced surrealist-inflected collages. Moreover, Surrealist photographer Man Ray, had a direct iconographic influence on Lang Jingshan who would appropriate his technique of the rayography after World War Two during his exile in Taiwan. Lang Jingshan would equally shoot portraiture of Man Ray and Picasso. As such, this presentation will postulate that whilst Surrealist painting has a larger evidential base of direct influence, the photographic medium actually played a much greater role in shaping the aesthetic landscape of China before the Cultural Revolution.
China remains a land disassociated with Surrealism’s worldwide expanse, overshadowed by its orien... more China remains a land disassociated with Surrealism’s worldwide expanse, overshadowed by its oriental neighbour Japan. Notwithstanding, in 1925, André Breton speaks of chimerical plans to visit China in his ‘Lettre aux Voyants’ describing a dream. Alas, this was a journey that Breton would never empirically make, perhaps because of occulted, superstitious reasoning. Despite this, Surrealism was highly influential amongst avant-garde circles in cosmopolitan Shanghai despite their avant-garde’s inability to penetrate Surrealist spaces in Europe. In particular, the Shanghainese Storm Society (juelanshe), specifically credits surrealism in their manifesto of 1932. Furthermore, in 1935 a Shanghainese journal called Art Winds (Yifeng) published a special edition on surrealism including a translation of André Breton’s 1924 manifesto. Amidst this multi-layered context, I discuss the early photographic oeuvre of Lang Jingshan who was based in this international port city of artistic cross-fertilisation. I make a case for Lang Jingshan’s Surrealism with regard to Man Ray whom he would meet in Paris after World War Two. Man Ray gave Lang his business card and wrote a dedication to him. I particularly focus upon both photographers’ treatment of nudes. Despite this, no literature on Lang Jingshan in English or French makes the case for him as a surrealist. Some works in the Chinese language very briefly attribute certain features of his work to surrealism, but such research is at a highly nascent stage, consisting of statements rather than sustained investigation. Conversely, I conduct an iconographical analysis between Lang Jingshan’s photography and western pictorialism which was in turn a key influence on surrealist photography given the intermediaries of figures such as Alfred Stieglitz and his 291 Gallery. Jingshan’s archives reveals photographs of pictorialists such as Steiglitz and Imogen Cunningham alongside Man Ray. Next, I look at the core philosophical premise of surrealism: the reconciliation of dream and reality explicated in the 1924 manifesto. I argue that Jingshan’s photography, by enmeshing the indexical reality of photography with the subjectivity of painting, reifies this seminal surrealist principle. This is known as composite photography. (集锦摄影) Lang Jingshan also participated in several international exhibitions which further bolster his cosmopolitan credentials. Hence, I conduct a close analysis of the photographs he displayed at his monographic exhibition at Aurore University located in Shanghai's French Concession in 1939 and the international reception thereof. Finally, Lang Jingshan’s was also a prominent photographer of the cityscape. His treatment of modern Shanghai is hence compared the photographic treatment of Paris in André Breton’s Nadja (1924). Ultimately, Lang’s pictorialism created a technical commingling of east and west, catalysing a sense of global cosmopolitanism within the creative process itself.
This essay interrogates Chinese artist Guan Xiao’s ironic inclusion in Christine Macel’s Pavilion... more This essay interrogates Chinese artist Guan Xiao’s ironic inclusion in Christine Macel’s Pavilion of Tradition. This is juxtaposed with the staunchly patriotic Chinese Pavilion entitled Continuum: Generation after Generation at the Venice Biennale 2017. The Chinese pavilion subsumes a plethora of modernised traditional Chinese art forms such as 山水( Land and Water Painting) 书法(Calligraphy) 影戏 (Shadow Puppetry) and 苏绣 (Suzhou Embroidery). Conversely, Xiao parodies the western commodity fetishism surrounding Michelangelo’s sculpture David (1501-1504) in a video installation of the same name, accompanied by a Chinese karaoke voiceover. Hence, I contend that Contemporary Chinese art is separated into two camps: artists such as Xiao’s work is critically cosmopolitan in nature, eschewing the rigidities of national boundaries, drawing from culturally diverse artistic precedents. Whilst Xiao’s work avoids a critique of China, she does not draw heavily from Chinese cultural heritage. In stark contrast, several contemporary Chinese artists work seeks to reaffirm the homogenous culture of the nation in the Chinese Pavilion. Amidst a wealth of competing countries, Chinese artwork is perhaps where we see the greatest disparity between exhibitors in the national pavilion and those within the thematic international exhibition at the Venice Biennale. This is also the case historically as the infamous exhibit of Ai Weiwei’s SACRED taught us in 2013, documenting his forced imprisonment and interrogation by Chinese authorities. Subsequently, in 2014, Chinese Premier Xi Jinping outlined a cultural policy whereby artists were encouraged to support the national interest. For example, the fourth proposition of his speech reads as follows ‘中国精神是社会主义文艺的灵魂 [The Chinese spirit is comprised of artistic socialism – my translation] (Xinhua News:2015) This remains the context in which the national pavilion of 2017 has been mounted, creating a palpable tension between patriotism and cosmopolitanism which is, in turn, applicable to the biennale as a whole.
Lola Alvarez Bravo is perhaps best-known for her copious portraiture of surrealist painter Frida ... more Lola Alvarez Bravo is perhaps best-known for her copious portraiture of surrealist painter Frida Kahlo and was influenced by left-wing European artists of the late 1920’s and 1930’s. (Ferrer: 2006: 53). Despite this, she is memorialised as secondary to her husband, the illustrious Manuel Alvarez Bravo who published in surrealist journal Minotaure (1933-1939). She left Bravo due to his "womanising" (16) and faced "chauvinism, and occasional downright hostility, especially in her earlier career." (59) Undoubtedly surrealist influences spurred Lola Alvarez Bravo to create photomontages such as El sueño de los pobres (1935) which she exhibits in "Carteles revolucionarios de las pintoras del sector femenino de la Sección de Artes Plástica’ in Guadalajara. Notwithstanding, I will focus upon aspects of Lola Alvarez Bravo’s practice that epitomise Seyla Benhabib’s cosmopolitan ideal of ‘the concrete other’. As Benhabib (1992:161-2) states the concrete other envisions "how I as a finite, concrete, embodied individual, shape and fashion the circumstances of my birth and family, linguistic, cultural and gendered identity into a concrete narrative that stands as my life story … the self is not a thing, a substrate but a protagonist of a life’s tale." I concentrate on Bravo’s photographic contributions to the 1930s periodicals Mexican Folkways and El Maestro Rural with previously un-researched images kindly sent from the Lola Alvarez Bravo archive in Arizona and taken at the BNF, Paris. Together these magazines provide an in-depth vision of Mexico’s cultural idiosyncrasies and myriad traditions, the epitome of the concrete other. Regarding El Maestro Rural, Bravo shot both copious front covers alongside photographs accompanying articles. In Mexican Folkways, Bravo’s photography of Mexican Plastic Arts will be investigated. Apropos Lola Alvarez Bravo’s philosophical attitude towards photography, Wright-Rios (2014:200) comments "It seems as if she truly believed she was “finding” Mexican culture in situ and saving it for posterity." Cosmopolitanism can only be realised with an in-depth understanding of a culture. Hence, interrogating national culture should not be conflated with nationalism as Benhabib’s formulation of the concrete other teaches us. Bravo’s portrayals of Mexico catalyse a dialogue with the international avant-garde. I hope to show that Bravo’s photography forms a fervent statement of cosmopolitanism and individuality, distanced from Kant’s collective iterations of this political theory in order to imagine ourselves.
'In terms of academic literature apropos surrealism, there exists no concentration on the sense o... more 'In terms of academic literature apropos surrealism, there exists no concentration on the sense of a double alterity: that of being a non-western woman in the midst of the male-dominated, Parisian-centric avant-garde. Guadeloupian dancer Adrienne Fidelin was the first black model to adorn the pages of a prominent fashion magazine in 1937. Photographed by her lover Man Ray, she poses for a spread entitled ‘La Mode au Congo’ for the renowned Harper’s Bazaar. An immediate racial conflation is apparent. Her skin colour reifies a nation on a different continent with completely antinomic aesthetics and heritage to Guadeloupe. Thus, I read Ray’s portrayal of Fidelin in tandem with cosmopolitan philosopher Seyla Benhabib’s theory of the generalized vs concrete other. I argue for the former interpretation whereby one denies individuals ‘a concrete history, identity and affective-emotional constitution.’ (Benhabib:1987)
University of Szcencin (Poland) Transmediating Cultures International Conference
Durham University July 2016 International conference
Surrealism : A global cultural movement with local political agency.
Papers by Lauren Walden
The Routledge Companion to Surrealism, 2022
This article will chart the role of Surrealism in mainland China from a fledgling democracy with ... more This article will chart the role of Surrealism in mainland China from a fledgling democracy with colonial concessions (1930–1937), Japanese occupation (1937–1945), Civil War (1945–1949), socialist revolution (1949–1976), reform and opening up to the present day (1979–). In the case of Taiwan, Surrealism will be examined through the Japanese occupation until 1945 and martial law (1949–1987), culminating in its continued presence on the island’s present-day democracy.
Visual Anthropology, 2021
The Surrealist journals Documents (1929–1930) and Minotaure (1933–1939) sought to overturn the eu... more The Surrealist journals Documents (1929–1930) and Minotaure (1933–1939) sought to overturn the eurocentric hegemony of art history, especially the notion that Greece had formed the original cradle of civilization. Due to close-knit linkages with anthropologists in these periodicals, the Surrealists’ understanding of indigenous art was far from superficial; nor was it limited to mere aesthetic borrowings, as presented in William Rubin’s controversial “Primitivism” exhibition of 1984. The diverse range of African sculptures in both French journals testify to a much wider influence upon Surrealist thought, often aligned with uneasy but core concepts of universality, freedom of the spirit, the occult, automatism and non-national limits. As such, the original use-value of sculptures within their indigenous African cultures will be interrogated beyond purely aesthetic concerns, rearticulated through the prism of core Surrealist ideas to delineate both genuine resonances and intentional deviations. Although the Surrealists attempted to attenuate the colonial legacy of Western art history, the movement seems to rest in a state of exception à propos the provenance of sculpture featured in their periodicals and personal collections. Indeed, Minotaure published Marcel Griaule’s Mission Dakar-Djibouti and its treasure-trove of looted African wares which would become the property of France. Ultimately, photomechanical reproduction of these sculptures did not satiate the colonial powers’ lust to possess, nor that of avant-garde collectors. The original, “auratic” object still reigned supreme, creating a troubled complicity between Surrealism and the ideology of colonialism that they vehemently protested against.
Visual Studies , 2020
This study posits that current cultural diplomacy practice in UK museums and galleries could be s... more This study posits that current cultural diplomacy practice in UK museums and galleries could be significantly improved. Indeed, cultural diplomacy is commonly viewed as nationalist propaganda. An attempt to theoretically debunk this proposition indicates that greater understanding between peoples can be engendered by unifying the ideologies of internationalism and liberalism in the cultural sector. Liberalism is viewed as the present ideology operating in Museums and Galleries whilst internationalism is considered as a nascent force. Working in symbiosis, liberalism allows for a multiplicity of discourse whilst internationalism allows for a critical reappraisal of the status quo and nation-state hegemony. Indeed, a multiplicity of dialogic discourse is essential for cultural institutions to maintain a non-hegemonic stance. This is, of course, particularly apparent in contemporary art work which can often be subversive of national governments and the very idea of a nation-state. Further to this, a form of localised cultural diplomacy can reach the public at large and question the cultural capital of world centres. Empirically speaking, the exhibition format is used as a means to render cultural diplomacy palatable for public consumption. Hence, the UK case study Art from Elsewhere will be introduced which has rendered the international a normative presence in local art galleries. This 2014–2016 exhibition comprised a tour of recent contemporary art acquisitions in regional permanent collections which were funded by a £5 million pound grant from the UK charitable organisation, Art Fund. Instead of monophonic exhibitions emanating from one nation, Art from Elsewhere engenders a multilateral dialogue catalysed by the polyphonic nature of artists from several different nations whose works are juxtaposed both in conflict, symmetry and contrast to one another.
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Seminars by Lauren Walden
Conference Presentations by Lauren Walden
Papers by Lauren Walden
Surrealist journals Documents (1929-30) and Minotaure (1933-39) sought to overturn the euro-centric hegemony of art history, especially the notion that Greece formed the original cradle of civilisation. Although the Surrealists attempted to attenuate the colonial legacy of art history, the movement seems to reside in a state of exception apropos the provenance of sculpture featured in their periodicals.
Due to close-knit linkages with anthropologists in these periodicals, the Surrealist’s understanding of indigenous art was far from superficial nor was it limited to mere aesthetic borrowings as was presented in William Rubin’s controversial Primitivism exhibition (1984). The African sculptures in both journals testify to a much wider influence upon Surrealist thought, embodying notions of otherness, ritual, and freedom of the spirit, the occult, automatism and non-national limits. As such, the original use-value of sculptures within their indigenous African cultures will be interrogated beyond purely aesthetic concerns and aligned with core Surrealist ideas.
Minotaure publishes Marcel Griaule’s Mission Dakar-Djibouti and its treasure-trove of looted African wares that would become the property of France. Ultimately, photomechanical reproduction of these sculptures did not satiate the colonial powers’ lustfulness for possession. The original, ‘auratic’ object still reigned supreme, creating an uneasy complicity between Surrealism and the ideology of Colonialism they vehemently protested against.
Dr Lauren Walden was granted a doctorate from Coventry University in 2019 where she interrogated instances of cultural exchange between Surrealism and Africa, Oceania, Latin America and China through the prism of photography. Her PhD utilised primary sources in French, Spanish and Chinese and she received a fellowship from the Centre for Creative Photography in Arizona to consult the archives of Mexican photographer Lola Alvarez Bravo. She also holds a BA from the University of Cambridge and an MA from Newcastle University. Amongst others, Dr Walden has an upcoming publication in Taylor and Francis’s Visual Resources Journal entitled ‘British Museum Ethnographic Photography at the 1936 International Surrealist Exhibition’. She is currently a visiting lecturer in Art History at the University of Hertfordshire.