posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00authored byL Scharoun, F Tatarovic
Since 1949, propaganda posters have been produced in China as a visual language to unite the masses. Posters and billboards portraying images of youth in minority costumes, traditional paper cuts and China’s abundant workforce engaged in modernisation were meant to unite the masses through ‘revolutionary realism with revolutionary romanticism’. These images offer interesting insight into Mao’s version ‘socialist utopia’. With the opening of China to foreign investment and trade in 1979, the vision of a ‘socialist utopia’ has changed once again. Propaganda posters are replaced with large-scale billboards featuring luxury cars, clothing and products from the West. In order to illustrate this change, artists from Deakin University in Melbourne, Australia, Lisa Scharoun (Lecturer of Graphic Design) and Frances Tatarovic (Lecturer of Photography), have created a series of ‘advertisements’ that utilize similar themes of Maoist era propaganda posters with the infusion of the glossy characteristics of luxury fashion advertising. The images reference techniques and the visual language of contemporary western commercial fashion photography. Within the artworks, the past and present visual culture of China is juxtaposed to create a dialogue between the icons of the Maoist vision of a socialist utopia and the contemporary visual icons of fashion and luxury advertising.
History
Publisher
Shang Gallery
Location
Shanghai, China
Place of publication
Shanghai, China
Start date
2008-11-14
End date
2008-11-17
ISBN-13
9780646504797
Language
eng
Notes
‘Visions of Utopia’ had its first showing at the Shang Gallery, Shanghai, China in November 2008 where the Consul General of Australia, Mr. Tom Connor, officially opened it. The exhibition was also shown at the Dennys Lascelles Exhibition Gallery on Deakin's Geelong waterfront campus 12 June - 29 July 2009. Visions of Utopia won first prize in an international photographic competition for their series of artworks. The exhibition also won first prize in the Fine Art-Collage category of the 2009 Prix de la Photographie Paris (PX3). The exhibition included the following artworks: The burden of plenty, Catching lotus flowers, Fruits of the harvest, Selecting good seeds, Promise of plenty, The dreams of women, Fatherland, Eden.
Publication classification
J2 Minor original creative works; JO1 Original creative work - Visual art work