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Sunday, November 22, 2009
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    Old Taking Shape: Ceramics in Southeast Asia
    Place: Arthur M. Sackler Gallery - Washington, Smithsonian Institution, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 707, District of Columbia, USA
    Date: Apr 01, 07 to Apr 01, 10
    Detail: Approximately 200 diverse and visually striking ceramic vessels from Southeast Asia are on long–term view April 1 through the year 2010 in "Taking Shape: Ceramics in Southeast Asia." The clay pots and jars form the most enduring record of human activity in this part of the world, during the prehistoric period to the present.
    Donated to the Sackler between 1996 and 2005 by brothers Osborne and Victor Hauge and their wives Gratia and Takako, these remarkable objects provide the focus for a detailed narrative of the migration of pots from their makers to their users. Included in the Hauge gift are more than 800 vessels made in Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos, together with Chinese bowls and jars exported to Southeast Asia.
    "Taking Shape" presents the two basic types of ceramics produced in Southeast Asia–soft, porous earthenware and high–fired stoneware. Earthenware continues to be used to cool drinking water, cook rice and curries over a wood fire and heat water for reeling silk. Watertight stoneware jars store grains, transport goods for long–distance trade and brew the rice beer essential for hospitality and ceremonies.
    Pieces from the Hauge collection show the regional diversity of earthenware and stoneware production throughout time. The swirling designs of red–painted earthenware pots from prehistoric Thailand and the forms of glazed and unglazed stoneware jars from 17th– to 19th–century central Vietnam suggest the depth and diversity of the ceramic traditions. Spanning four millennia of invention and exchange, from the prehistoric period to the present, the objects on view were crafted for rituals, burials, domestic use and trade.
    "Taking Shape" also illuminates the dimensions of international trade that brought southern Chinese ceramics into mainland Southeast Asia. Glazed stoneware dishes, emblazoned with blue or brown floral designs, demonstrate how the shapes and decorations of Chinese ceramics inspired the addition of painted decorations to tableware made in kilns in Vietnam and Thailand. In turn, such ceramics competed successfully in the international trade of the 15th and 16th centuries, reaching distant markets from Japan to Turkey.
    The exhibition narrative interweaves discoveries of excavations and shipwrecks in Asia to convey the passage of works similar to the Hauge objects on their way to distant markets. Jars that reached their intended destinations–which included Indonesia, the Philippines and Japan–often became heirlooms, valued for their exotic origins, superior technology and beauty.
    Plans are under way to publish online all 800 objects in the Hauge Collection of Ceramics in Mainland Southeast Asia. This dynamic web-based catalogue will grow and evolve as new discoveries and research are incorporated into the site. Check this page for announcements of its launch.

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    Old From the Land of the Gods: Art of the Kathmandu Valley
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Mar 14, 08 to Mar 14, 10
    Detail: Historically, the kingdoms of the Kathmandu Valley comprised the political, religious, and cultural entity known as “Nepal.” Located between India and Tibet, the Valley has been the crossroads of trans-Himalayan trade, the shared sacred site of various Himalayan religions, and the epicenter of Himalayan arts production and influence. This unique position has fostered a tremendous amount of cultural and religious exchange in Kathmandu, thus establishing a living creative tradition that is one of the single most important influences in Himalayan art history. This exhibition features the finest examples of Nepalese art from the RMA collection, highlighting the variety of forms and subjects, techniques and media that emerged from the Valley’s creative matrix.

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    Old What Is It? Himalayan Art
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Feb 04, 09 to Feb 04, 10
    Detail: Himalayan art is new terrain for many people. This exhibition is intended to serve as a guide through this exhilarating landscape. It is organized into four sections, and each object on view contributes a partial answer to the question “What is Himalayan art?” The installation will change periodically to refocus the questions and to pose others. The museum as a whole is a journey along many paths through Himalayan art, offering intimate encounters and changing perspectives.

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    Old Art, Archives and Activism: Martin Wong’s Downtown Crossings
    Place: A/P/A Institute at New York University - New York, 7th Floor Gallery, 41-51 E. 11th Street, New York, USA
    Date: Mar 06, 09 to Dec 18, 09
    Detail: The Asian/Pacific/American Institute at New York University is proud to present the exhibition “Art, Archives, and Activism: Martin Wong’s Downtown Crossings” from March 6-December 18, 2009. From the mid ’80s through the early ’90s, artist Martin Wong and other downtown New York artists were affected by an intersection of major historic events spanning the AIDS epidemic, urban renewal and attacks on graffiti in the city, to Tiananmen Square abroad. The exhibition explores artists who crossed paths during this particular time, influencing and inspiring discussions, art works, and activism.
    The exhibition winds a story through the voices of his closest friends and peers during Wong’s time in New York City from the early 1980s through the mid-1990s. As Wong would come to portray his friends, fellow artists such as Miguel (Mikey) Pinero, Sharp, Chris “Daze” Ellis, among others within his paintings, bringing them into a world of a Lower East Side re-imagined with the fantasies of escapism and romanticism of a barren land amid towering walls of crumbling brick where they dwelt, in this exhibition, the archival materials and lasting influences of Wong’s legacy and his friendships in turn shape a portrait of the artist—re-imagined and remembered.
    The artist’s work shown in “Art, Archives, and Activism” range from the early ’80s through the ’90s and have been loaned from his estate at PPOW Gallery and the collections of his closest friends. Some photos, paintings and drawings have never been shown to the public before.
    Working with and drawing materials from the Fales Library and Special Collections at New York University along with personal collections, “Art, Archives, and Activism” presents a story of a time and the interconnectedness of the artists with the world around them through the artwork, letters, photographs, videos, postcards, posters, and flyers of participant artists. The exhibition traverses the artificial borders of these two decades, and instead is spread through the moment delineated by artists’ lives and the issues that engulfed them — their personal influences, artistic production and activism that were catalyzed from these connections and overlapping paths.

    The opening reception is also the reception and book celebration for the Asian American Art Symposium 2009 at NYU presented by A/P/A Institute and co-sponsored by The Noguchi Museum; The Japan Foundation, New York; The Asia Society; NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development; and Museum of Chinese in America. For more information about the symposium please visit www.apa.nyu.edu

    About Martin Wong:

    Martin Wong (b.1946-1999) is best known for his elegiac realist paintings of the Lower East Side tenements and their inhabitants. Born in Portland, OR, and raised in San Francisco, CA, Wong moved from the West Coast to New York City in 1978 to the Meyer’s hotel, what he described in a letter to a friend as the last remaining single occupancy hotel at the waterfront. He would famously relocate to the Lower East Side in 1982, where he remained until returning to San Francisco in his parents’ care in the late ’90s while fighting his personal battle with AIDS. Trained as a ceramicist, the colors that Wong used were culled from the paints used in his ceramics from iron oxides to gold accenting the decaying brick walls of abandoned Lower East Side tenements. Wong would come to be an influential artist within the downtown scene and a mentor to a league of young artists including Lady Pink, Chris “Daze” Ellis, Lee Quinones, among others. In 1998, then New Museum curator Dan Cameron and Barry Blinderman, who had been Wong’s art dealer and was now the director at the Illinois State University Galleries at Normal, organized a major retrospective for Wong at The New Museum. The artist is also collected by the Metropolitan Museum, the Bronx Museum of Art, and the Whitney Museum of Art, among other collections. After his death on August 12, 1999, his mother Florence Wong Fie established the Martin Wong Foundation, which continues to support artists and educational programs in the arts.

    About A/P/A Institute at NYU:

    The A/P/A Institute has produced programming, publications, exhibitions, new research, and a long-running artist-in-residence program, attracting leading academics and practitioners. The multiple archival collection initiatives, including the recently completed acquisition of the Yoshio Kishi / Irene Yah Ling Sun Collection, spearheaded by the A/P/A Institute have also continued to build a foundation of, and preservation and access to, important historical documents and previously overlooked materials for present and future researchers and students. Currently located in the Union Square neighborhood, the A/P/A Institute continues to serve the community with public programs based off research, cultural production, and scholarship on contemporary issues facing Asian/Pacific American communities and discourse.

    About Fales Library and Special Collections at NYU:

    The Fales Library, comprising nearly 200,000 volumes, and over 10,000 linear feet of archive and manuscript materials, houses the Fales Collection of rare books and manuscripts in English and American literature, the Downtown Collection, the Food and Cookery Collection and the general Special Collections of the NYU Libraries. The Fales Collection was given to NYU in 1957 by DeCoursey Fales in memory of his father, Haliburton Fales. It is especially strong in English literature from the middle of the 18th century to the present, documenting developments in the novel. The Downtown Collection documents the downtown New York art, performance, and literary scenes from 1975 to the present and is extremely rich in archival holdings, including extensive film and video objects. The Food and Cookery Collection is a vast, and rapidly expanding collection of books and manuscripts documenting food and foodways with particular emphasis on New York City. Other strengths of the collection include the Berol Collection of Lewis Carroll Materials, the Robert Frost Library, the Kaplan and Rosenthal Collections of Judaica and Hebraica and the manuscript collections of Elizabeth Robins and Erich Maria Remarque. The Fales Library preserves manuscripts and original editions of books that are rare or important not only because of their texts, but also because of their value as artifacts.

    Exhibition Opening Reception: March 6, 2009, 6-8PM.
    Gallery hours: 10am-6pm Monday-Friday
    FREE and open to the public.

    Artist: Martin Wong

    Other artists, writers and friends of Martin Wong who have loaned or have work included in this exhibition include Chris “Daze” Ellis, Charlie Ahearn, John Ahearn, Jane Dickson, Miguel Pinero, Yasmin Ramirez, Lady Pink, Lee Quinones, Sharp, Zhang Hongtu, John “Crash” Matos, Wicked Gary, Bing Lee, PPOW Gallery, Harley Spiller, and his New York art dealer Barry Blinderman at Semaphore gallery. Additional items loaned from the Martin Wong papers at the Fales Library and Special Collections at New York University.

    Co-curated by Alexandra Chang, Tomie Arai and I-Ting Emily Chu.
    Associate Curated by Mie Iwatsuki.
    Archival consultation and support by Fales Library and Special Collections at NYU
    Installation design by Jonathan Lo

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    Old Mandala: The Perfect Circle
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Aug 14, 09 to Jan 11, 10
    Detail: The mandala, one of Himalayan Buddhism's most ubiquitous symbols, is created as an artistic aid for meditation. Depicting a realm that is both complex and sacred, the mandala is a visualization tool meant to advance practitioners toward a state of enlightenment.
    Mandala: The Perfect Circle explores the various manifestations of these objects, simultaneously explaining their symbolism, describing how they fulfill their intended function, and demonstrating their correlation to our physical reality. An important part of the exhibition is the focus on the complex symbolism of the number five, which plays an important role in Tantric Buddhism. This pentarchy is found in the spatial references of the five directions (the four cardinal points and the center), the five elements, the five colors, the five aggregates, the five wisdoms, and the five Transcendent (Tathagata) Buddhas. The exhibition also displays different types of mandalas, including paintings, three-dimensional works, portable mandalas, and ritual objects that are related to mandala ceremonies.
    While many of the paintings in this exhibition are from the collection of the Rubin Museum, the show also includes masterpieces from other museums and private collections from around the world, including the Musée Guimet (Paris), Philadelphia Museum of Art (Philadelphia), Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), Pacific Asia Museum (Pasadena), and Metropolitan Museum (New York).
    Recently created virtual mandalas made by computer graphic designers show the creation of a sand mandala and demonstrate the three-dimensionality, fragility and transparency of the mandala (productions by Cornell University, Zurich University, and others).

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    Old Breaking the Veils: Women Artists from the Islamic World
    Place: Yale University, Institute of Sacred Music (ISM) - New Haven, 409 Prospect St. (Location is wheelchair accessible), Connecticut, USA
    Date: Sep 01, 09 to Dec 12, 09
    Detail: Exhibition features work by female artists from Islamic countries as diverse as Sudan, Malaysia, Turkey, Iran and Pakistan, as well as the Levant, the Gulf states and North Africa. All works come from the collection of the Royal Society of Fine Arts of Jordan, with works by the society's founder and president, Princess Wijdan Al-Hashemi, also an artist, included in the exhibit.

    Admission: Free

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    Old Silk and Bamboo: Music and Art of China
    Place: Metropolitan Museum of Art - New York, USA
    Date: Sep 05, 09 to Feb 07, 10
    Detail: An exhibition celebrating the diverse musical heritage of China, one of the oldest continuously documented traditions with roots reaching back more than 8,000 years. With about 80 objects drawn largely from the museum’s permanent collection, the exhibition features a wide variety of musical instruments and art, including a rare Ming dynasty ivory-covered pipa (lute) and lacquered qin (zither), extraordinary bells from the fifth century BCE and Han dynasty pottery dancing figures and musicians. The museum will also offer a number of educational activities and performances, including an event on 18 October - `Sunday at the Met—A Chinese Celebration’ presented by the curators - J. Kenneth Moore, Frederick P. Rose Curator, Department of Musical Instruments and James C. Y. Watt, Brooke Russell Astor Chairman, Department of Asian Art.

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    Old Hanging Fire: Contemporary Art from Pakistan
    Place: Asia Society and Museum - New York, 725 Park Avenue (at 70th Street), USA
    Date: Sep 10, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: Guest curator Salima Hashmi joins artist Asma Mundrawala and other artists featured in the exhibition 'Hanging Fire: Contemporary Art from Pakistan' to explore the thriving contemporary art environment in Pakistan and discuss the challenges of producing art in Pakistan today. Fifty works by 15 of Pakistan's most highly regarded contemporary artists will be showcased.

    Opening Hours: Tuesday - Sunday, 11am - 6pm; Friday, 11am - 9pm

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    Old Peaceful Conquerors: Jain Manuscript Painting
    Place: Metropolitan Museum of Art - New York, USA
    Date: Sep 10, 09 to Mar 21, 10
    Detail: The art of the book in medieval India is closely associated with the Jain religious community, and illustrated palm-leaf manuscripts survive from around the 10th century, while those on paper appear after the 12th, when paper was introduced from Iran. The use of paper permitted larger compositions and a greater variety of decorative devices and borders. Significantly, however, the format of the palm-leaf manuscript was retained. By the end of the 14th century, deluxe manuscripts were produced on paper, brilliantly adorned with gold, silver, crimson and a rich ultramarine derived from imported lapis lazuli. The patrons of the works were mainly Svetambara Jains, who considered the commissioning of illustrated books and their donation to Jain temple libraries to be an important merit-making activity. A selection of these exquisite manuscripts will be on view, along with bronzes sculptures of Jinas and a ceremonial painted textile.

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    Old Arts of Ancient Viet Nam: From River Plain to OpenSea
    Place: The Museum of Fine Arts - Houston, Texas, USA
    Date: Sep 13, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: An unprecedented exhibition of ancient art from Vietnam - the first in the US to address the historical, geographic and cultural contexts of pre-colonial Vietnamese art in depth. It introduces new scholarship on the history of Vietnamese art. Approximately 110 objects dating from the first millennium BCE to the 17th century on rare loan from Vien Nam's leading museums. Highlights include ritual bronzes, terracotta burial wares, fine gold jewelry, Hindu and Buddhist sculptures and ornaments made of jade, lapis lazuli, crystal and carnelian. The works have never been exhibited in the US and many have never traveled outside of Vietnam.

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    Old Victorious Ones: Jain Images of Perfection
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Sep 18, 09 to Feb 15, 10
    Detail: Victorious Ones: Jain Images of Perfection presents an array of paintings and sculptures depicting the Jinas, the founding teachers of Jainism, and the spaces they sanctify throughout the universe. Central to this Indian ascetic faith, dating from the fifth century BCE, is an ethic of nonviolence and respect for all living beings. Images of the Jinas embody these ideals of perfection and also serve as objects of devotion through which the Jinas can be accessed.

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    Old Noble Tombs at Mawangdui: Art and Life in the Changsha Kingdom, China (3rd Century BCE - 1st Century CE)
    Place: Santa Barbara Museum of Art - Santa Barbara, California, USA
    Date: Sep 19, 09 to Dec 13, 09
    Detail: More than 2,000 years ago, a Chinese marquis and his family began their plans for the afterlife with three lavish tombs in Hunan province which were excavated in the 1970s. For the first time in the US, their extraordinary existence will come to life through some 70 treasures including lacquer ware, wood carvings, jade ornaments, bronze sculptures, seals and silk costumes and textiles from the Hunan Provincial Museum. The extraordinary significance of this assemblage is not only apparent in the variety and quality of objects, but also the time period and place from whence these artefacts originated. The objects preserved in the Mawangdui tombs give a visual dimension to early Han dynasty beliefs, design and technology, while the body of material culture challenges us to re-evaluate our current understanding of early China. Many preserved delicate or perishable materials, such as food, drink and cosmetics, mostly fashioned with wood, silk and paper. Some specific highlights include a two-tiered cosmetic box containing nine small boxes, thought to have belonged to Lady Dai. The exhibition also features one remarkably preserved silk robe and textile fragments two of which are the world’s earliest known examples of printed and painted design on gauze weave. From these superb examples, silk was widely used among nobilities in early Han dynasty. Organized by the China Institute Gallery, a fully illustrated, bilingual catalogue accompanies the exhibition.

    A series of lectures will take place:

    27 September 2:30 – 3:30 pm: Mawangdui and Its Place in the History of Chinese Funerary Customs by Lothar von Falkenhausen, Professor of Chinese Art History and Archaeology at UCLA and Director pro tem of the Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA

    4 October 2:30 – 3:30 pm: Roaming in the Celestial Realm: Immortality and the Imagination in Han Dynasty China by Peter Sturman, Professor of Chinese Painting and Calligraphy, Department of the History of Art and Architecture at UCSB

    18 October 2:30 – 3:30 pm: Rethinking Early China in Light of the Mawangdui Finds by Ron Egan, Professor of Chinese Literature and Aesthetics, Department of East Asian Languages and Cultural Studies at UCSB

    15 November 2:30 – 3:30 pm: Artisans of Ancient China by Anthony Barbieri-Low, Associate Professor of Ancient China, Chinese Archaeology and Epigraphy, Department of History at UCSB

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    Old Experimental Geography: Radical Approaches to Landscape, Cartography, and Urbanism
    Place: Independent Curators International - New York, 799 Broadway, Suite 205, USA
    Date: Sep 19, 09 to May 30, 10
    Detail: "Experimental Geography", an exhibition that explores the distinctions between geographical study and artistic experience of the earth, as well as the juncture where the two realms collide and possibly make a new field altogether. The exhibition presents a panoptic view of this new practice through a wide range of mediums including interactive computer units, sound and video installations, photography, sculpture, and experimental cartography created by 18 artists or artist teams from six countries.
    Geography can involve the study of specific histories, sites, and memories. Every estuary, landfill, and cul-de-sac has a story to tell. The task of the geographer is to alert us to what is directly in front of us, while the task of the experimental geographer—an amalgam of scientist, artist, and explorer—is to do so in a manner that deploys aesthetics, ambiguity, poetry, and a dash of empiricism.
    The manifestations of "experimental geography" (a term coined by geographer Trevor Paglen in 2002) run the gamut of contemporary art practice: sewn cloth cities that spill out of suitcases, bus tours through water treatment centers, performers climbing up the sides of buildings, and sound art of the breaths exhaled in running the evacuation route of Boston. In the hands of contemporary artists, the study of humanity's engagement with the earth's topography becomes a riddle best solved in experimental fashion.
    The approaches used by the artists featured in "Experimental Geography" range from a poetic conflation of humanity and the earth to more empirical studies of our planet. Ilana Halperin melds immediate physical and personal actions with geologic contexts; she offers poetic conflations of differing fields of interest. Creating projects that are more empirically minded, the Center for Land Use Interpretation (CLUI), a research organization, explores the nature and extent of human interaction with the earth's surface, embracing a multidisciplinary approach to fulfilling its mission. Using skill sets culled from the toolbox of geography, the work re-familiarizes the viewer with the overlooked American landscape including man-made islands, submerged cities, traffic in Los Angeles, and the broadcast antennas in the San Gabriel Mountains, and other details drawn from everyday experience.


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    Event Details

    Other participating artists included:
    ---------------------------------------
    Francis Alÿs, AREA Chicago, The Center for Land Use Interpretation, The Center for Urban Pedagogy (CUP), kanarinka (Catherine D'Ignazio), e-Xplo, Ilana Halperin, Lize Mogel, Multiplicity, Trevor Paglen, Raqs Media Collective, Ellen Rothenberg, Spurse, Deborah Stratman, Julia Meltzer and David Thorne, Daniel Tucker (project organizer) The We Are Here Map Archive, Alex Villar

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    Old Hokusai’s Summit: Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji
    Place: Honolulu Academy of Arts - Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
    Date: Sep 24, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: For the first time in a decade, the museum will present Katsushika Hokusai’s entire `Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji’ series as well as works depicting Mount Fuji by other artists. This will be an exceptional opportunity to see some of the museum's signature works of art, and the first time in a decade that the complete series has been displayed. Other Hokusai prints reveal his remarkable output and later works inspired by the series that show the central place of Mount Fuji as a symbol of Japan. The exhibition is made up of six sections, putting Hokusai and Mount Fuji into cultural context.
    It starts with an introduction to Mount Fuji, and its almost cultlike place in Japanese culture. The section includes painting from the Richard Lane Collection, conserved by the Academy’s Asian Painting Conservation Studio and an extremely rare woodblock-printed map of Mount Fuji that was meant to be cut out and assembled as a three-dimensional model. An overview of Hokusai, which will reveal the development of his style, starts with rare early student works. Hokusai works placed next to a copperplate engraving by 18th-century English artist William Hogarth and a Rembrandt etching will illustrate how Hokusai adapted Western art elements such as perspective. The third section will feature `Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji’ with a special place for the three most famous prints—The Great Wave Off Kanagawa, Mount Fuji in Clear Weather (commonly known as Red Fuji), and Thunderstorm Beneath the Summit.

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    Old China Design Now
    Place: Portland Museum of Art - Portland, 1219 SW Park Avenue, Oregon, USA
    Date: Oct 03, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: The exhibition captures a dynamic phase as China opened up to global influences, and looks at developments in three rapidly expanding cities - Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. Displaying the work of Chinese and international designers, it features architecture, fashion, youth culture and graphics as well as film, photography, product and furniture design and digital media.

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    Old Eccentric Visions – The Worlds of Luo Ping (1733–1799)
    Place: Metropolitan Museum of Art - New York, USA
    Date: Oct 06, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: The two most important museums in China, the PalaceMuseum in Beijing and the ShanghaiMuseum, along with The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York have come together under the direction of the Museum Rietberg to assemble the first ever comprehensive presentation of the work of the youngest of the so-called `Eight Eccentrics of Yangzhou’. Luo Ping was an extraordinary artist whose works influenced the course of later Chinese painting. Extremely versatile - his oeuvre includes portraits, figure paintings, landscapes and floral studies and embodies the vibrant diversity, complexity and brilliance of the Qing dynasty as it reached and passed its zenith. Featuring 27 works (94 images) by him, the exhibition will trace his career from Yangzhou to Beijing and reveal also the range and brilliance of his vision as well as his place among his peers. In addition, a selection of eight works (45 images) by Jin Nong, Luo's teacher and an elder member of the `Eight Eccentrics’, and of four works by Luo's wife, son and daughter give a more unified view of the great master's legacy. Many are Chinese `National Treasures’ complemented by 27 pieces from American collections. Highlights include the sensational handscroll Ghost Amusements, one of the best known paintings in the late imperial China, depicting the world of ghosts that the artist claimed he had seen with his own eyes. The exhibition will conclude with a group of 17 works by other Yangzhou Eccentrics that elucidate the broader cultural context for Luo Ping's career.
    An accompanying 300-page fully-illustrated catalogue features eight essays and detailed individual entries by some of the leading scholars in the field.

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    Old The Red Book of C.G. Jung
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Oct 07, 09 to Jan 25, 10
    Detail: The Red Book of C.G. Jung marks the first public presentation of what many believe to be psychology’s most influential unpublished work. Jung’s fascination with mandalas—Tibetan Buddhist representations of the cosmos used to help reach enlightenment—is evident in these books where mandala structures figure prominently in many sketches and paintings.

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    Old Roaring Tigers and Leaping Carp: Decoding the Symbolic Language of Chinese Animal Painting
    Place: Cincinnati Art Museum - Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
    Date: Oct 09, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: After two decades of research, Dr. Hou-mei Sung has unlocked the secret code of ancient Chinese animal paintings, which used sophisticated symbolic language and homonymic puns to convey political and social messages, and to critique or support China’s emperors. Roaring Tigers will showcase 100 examples of the finest animal paintings, as well as select sculptures, ornamental screens, and other objects, dating from the Ming Dynasty. The exhibition will feature many objects that have never traveled outside of Asia and other notable works from museums in China and around the world, including: the National Palace Museum, Taipei; The Palace Museum, Beijing; and the Shanghai Museum.

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    Old Serizawa: Master of Japanese Textile Design
    Place: Japan Society - New York, 333 East 47th Street, USA
    Date: Oct 09, 09 to Jan 17, 10
    Detail: An exhibition Serizawa Keisuke, a towering figure in 20th-century Japanese art , whose revival and bold exploration of the techniques of stencil-dyeing propelled him into the forefront of Japan’s folk art movement and popular culture. Nearly half of the 100 works featured are large-scale screens, wall hangings, scrolls and entrance curtains (noren) - their large swathes of rich, bright colours and inventive, layered patterns providing a visual feast. Still other works assembled from private and public collections include exquisite kimonos and ob) of cotton, bark cloth and a range of silks, as well as an array of books and book covers printed on cotton as well as on paper.
    A 134-page, fully illustrated catalogue edited by Joe Earle and published by Yale University Press provides the historical, cultural, and ideological context for Serizawa’s unique oeuvre in six essays written by leading Japanese and American scholars of 20th-century Japanese art and literature. Published in September 2009 ($35.00 retail), the Serizawa: Master of Japanese Textile Design catalogue will be available at Japan Society website, and booksellers nationwide.

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    Old Morinoue Family: New works by the Morinoue family
    Place: The Contemporary Museum - First Hawaiian Center - Honolulu, Hawaii, USA
    Date: Oct 09, 09 to Feb 19, 10
    Detail: Living and working out of their studios in Holualoa on the Big Island of Hawaii, Hiroki and Setsuko and their daughter Miho create work that is continuously inspired by each other and by their island surroundings. The range of work planned for this exhibition includes prints, sculptures, drawings, paintings and ceramics. The Morinoues were instrumental in founding the Holualoa Foundation for Arts and Culture, a non-profit organization that offers educational and cultural activities for their community.
    Hiroki Morinoue spent time in Japan studying with a Master woodblock printer. The skills he acquired while there are evident in his direct, elegant and fluid woodcuts and monoprints. In all of his painting, sculpture, photography, ceramics and prints there is a compelling sense of place; he is a patient observer of nature, its rhythms, cycles and patterns and these observations become poetic images in his work. Setsuko works not only with clay, but has also extended her field of creative works through mixed media in painting, printmaking and sculpture. Miho Morinoue's The Cove is a tour de force of drawing and imagination. Taking nearly a year to complete the drawing while touring with Complexions Contemporary Ballet, it incorporates portraits of friends and family, Japanese mythology and Hawaiian settings.

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    Old Beyond Golden Clouds: Japanese Screens from the Art Institute of Chicago and the Saint Louis Art Museum
    Place: Saint Louis Art Museum - Saint Louis, Missouri, USA
    Date: Oct 18, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: This exhibition of 32 works brings the scope of the significant permanent collections of Japanese screens at these two institutions to light. Most noteworthy is Beyond Golden Clouds which dates from early as the 16th century. Contemporary screens are also included and traditional examples on paper and silk as well as unconventional screens made of stoneware and other experimental materials will be featured. Through the exhibition, the particular role of screens as functional works of art, their characteristic materials and painting techniques, their development in Japan and collection in the West, and their influence on the art of other cultures are explored. Highlights include a pair of screens depicting a bustling ink landscape by Sesson Shukei (c. 1490-after 1577), the earliest work in the show. Willow Bridge and Waterwheel by Hasegawa Soya is a tour de force of the art of the folding screen produced during the format's heyday in the 17th century. Yamakawa Shuho's entrancing Relaxing in the Shade of 1933 and Kayama Matazo's powerful Star Festival of 1968 represent the screen's modern and contemporary eras. Morita Shiryu's Dragon Knows Dragon makes use of nontraditional materials; it is a calligraphic work wherein the characters appear in gold on a black surface that shines with the finish of lacquer.

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    Old Art of the Samurai: Japanese Arms and Armor, 1156–1868
    Place: The Metropolitan Museum of Art - New York, USA
    Date: Oct 21, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: This will be the first comprehensive exhibition devoted to the arts of the samurai. Arms and armour will be the principal focus, bringing together the finest examples of armor, swords and sword mountings, archery equipment and firearms, equestrian equipment, banners, surcoats and related accessories of rank such as fans and batons. Drawn entirely from public and private collections in Japan, the majority of objects date from the rise of the samurai in the late Heian period to the early modern Edo period. The martial skills and daily life of the samurai, their governing lords, the daimyo, and the ruling shoguns will also be evoked through the presence of painted scrolls and screens depicting battles and martial sports, castles, and portraits of individual warriors. The exhibition will conclude with a related exhibition documenting the recent restoration in Japan of a selection of arms and armor from the MetropolitanMuseum's permanent collection. This will be the first exhibition ever devoted to the subject of Japanese arms and armor conservation. The exhibition is made possible by The Yomiuri Shimbun.

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    Old Anish Kapoor: Memory
    Place: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum - New York, 1071 Fifth Avenue (at 89th Street), USA
    Date: Oct 21, 09 to Mar 28, 10
    Detail: A major new site-specific sculpture installation by Anish Kapoor is part of the Deutsche Bank Series at the Guggenheim and is the 14th in a series of artist projects commissioned by bank and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation for the Deutsche Guggenheim in Berlin. Constructed of Cor-Ten steel - a new material for the artist - Memory is a milestone for Kapoor. The work is composed of 154 Cor-Ten steel tiles, measures 14.5 x 8.97 x 4.48 meters overall, and weighs 24 tons. Its form nearly fills the gallery it occupies, challenging and altering the museum’s architecture through its improbable scale and proportions. The title alludes to how visitors encounter the work, which can never be seen in its entirety and remains largely hidden from view.
    The accompanying exhibition catalogue offers in-depth analyses of Kapoor’s creative intellectual process and documents Memory’s development from the initial models to its final form.

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    Old A Tale of Two Persian Carpets: The Ardabil and Coronation
    Place: Los Angeles County Museum of Art - Los Angeles, 5905 Wilshire Blvd., California, USA
    Date: Nov 14, 09 to Jan 18, 10
    Detail: Dating to the first half of the 16th century, the museum's two spectacular Persian carpets, both the gift of J. Paul Getty, have only rarely been exhibited due in part to their size and their sensitivity to light. Now, for the first time, these large and sumptuous carpets will be shown together, affording visitors t he opportunity to see two of the world's most renowned Persian carpets and to learn something of their fascinating history before and after they left Iran.

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    Old Choi Jeong Hwa Group Exhibit - Your Bright Future: 12 Contemporary Artists from Korea
    Place: Museum of Fine Arts - Houston, Texas, USA
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Feb 11, 10
    Detail: In conjunction with Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, this is the first major museum exhibition in the US to focus on contemporary art from South Korea. It features work by a generation of artists who have emerged since the mid-1980s - some well-known and others on the brink of recognition - working on the cutting edge of international art trends and within a distinctly Korean context. Featuring site-specific installations as well as video, computer animation and sculpture, the exhibition represents each artist through a large-scale installation piece or substantial body of work.

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    Old Visions of the Cosmos
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Dec 11, 09 to May 10, 10
    Detail: Visions of the Cosmos juxtaposes Eastern and Western conceptions of the universe through approximately 70 works, including sculptures, paintings, illuminated manuscripts, rare books and prints from American and European collections, and photographs of the galaxies taken largely by the Hubble Space Telescope. Visions of the Cosmos marks the first opportunity for visitors to compare European works with the museum's Himalayan art collection.

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    Old Treasures Rediscovered - Chinese Stone Sculpture from the Sackler Collections at Columbia University
    Place: University of Virginia Art Museum - Charlottesville, Thomas H. Bayly Building,155 Rugby Road,, Virginia, USA
    Date: Jan 15, 10 to Mar 14, 10
    Detail: This exhibition organized by Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery of Columbia University highlights one of the notable collections of Chinese stone sculpture in the US. The 21 sculptures -steles, full figures and heads of divinities, as well as funerary objects - provide a comprehensive view of how art manifests ritual practice and reveals, through iconography, the transmission and transformation of culture from the Han through the Tang Dynasty. Eighteen of the works are Buddhist and some have been ascribed for the first time to specific Buddhist sites. As tangible cultural artefacts, physical remains of history, the objects in the exhibition are crystallized manifestations of the imperial authority, religious fervor, and aesthetic ideas developed in one of China's most vibrant historical periods.

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    Old Arts of Ancient Viet Nam: From River Plain to OpenSea
    Place: Asia Society Museum - New York, USA
    Date: Feb 02, 10 to May 02, 10
    Detail: An unprecedented exhibition of ancient art from Vietnam - the first in the US to address the historical, geographic and cultural contexts of pre-colonial Vietnamese art in depth. It introduces new scholarship on the history of Vietnamese art. Approximately 110 objects dating from the first millennium BCE to the 17th century on rare loan from Vien Nam's leading museums. Highlights include ritual bronzes, terracotta burial wares, fine gold jewelry, Hindu and Buddhist sculptures and ornaments made of jade, lapis lazuli, crystal and carnelian. The works have never been exhibited in the US and many have never traveled outside of Vietnam.

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    Old Contemporary Art from Korea
    Place: University of Hawaii Art Gallery - Honolulu, 2535 McCarthy Mall #144, Hawaii, USA
    Date: Feb 21, 10 to Apr 09, 10
    Detail: This exhibition brings together about twenty contemporary artists from Korea. The artists are specially selected to highlight the historical dynamism of modern Korea.

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    Old Experimental Geography: Radical Approaches to Landscape, Cartography, and Urbanism
    Place: Independent Curators International at Colby College Museum of Art - Waterville, Colby College, Maine, USA
    Date: Feb 21, 10 to May 30, 10
    Detail: "Experimental Geography", an exhibition that explores the distinctions between geographical study and artistic experience of the earth, as well as the juncture where the two realms collide and possibly make a new field altogether. The exhibition presents a panoptic view of this new practice through a wide range of mediums including interactive computer units, sound and video installations, photography, sculpture, and experimental cartography created by 18 artists or artist teams from six countries.
    Geography can involve the study of specific histories, sites, and memories. Every estuary, landfill, and cul-de-sac has a story to tell. The task of the geographer is to alert us to what is directly in front of us, while the task of the experimental geographer—an amalgam of scientist, artist, and explorer—is to do so in a manner that deploys aesthetics, ambiguity, poetry, and a dash of empiricism.
    The manifestations of "experimental geography" (a term coined by geographer Trevor Paglen in 2002) run the gamut of contemporary art practice: sewn cloth cities that spill out of suitcases, bus tours through water treatment centers, performers climbing up the sides of buildings, and sound art of the breaths exhaled in running the evacuation route of Boston. In the hands of contemporary artists, the study of humanity's engagement with the earth's topography becomes a riddle best solved in experimental fashion.
    The approaches used by the artists featured in "Experimental Geography" range from a poetic conflation of humanity and the earth to more empirical studies of our planet. Ilana Halperin melds immediate physical and personal actions with geologic contexts; she offers poetic conflations of differing fields of interest. Creating projects that are more empirically minded, the Center for Land Use Interpretation (CLUI), a research organization, explores the nature and extent of human interaction with the earth's surface, embracing a multidisciplinary approach to fulfilling its mission. Using skill sets culled from the toolbox of geography, the work re-familiarizes the viewer with the overlooked American landscape including man-made islands, submerged cities, traffic in Los Angeles, and the broadcast antennas in the San Gabriel Mountains, and other details drawn from everyday experience.

    Other participating artists included:
    ----------------------------------------

    Francis Alÿs, AREA Chicago, The Center for Land Use Interpretation, The Center for Urban Pedagogy (CUP), kanarinka (Catherine D'Ignazio), e-Xplo, Ilana Halperin, Lize Mogel, Multiplicity, Trevor Paglen, Raqs Media Collective, Ellen Rothenberg, Spurse, Deborah Stratman, Julia Meltzer and David Thorne, Daniel Tucker (project organizer) The We Are Here Map Archive, Alex Villar.

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    Old Pilgrimage and Buddhist Art
    Place: Asia Society - New York, 725 Park Avenue (at 70th Street), USA
    Date: Mar 16, 10 to Jun 20, 10
    Detail: This dynamic loan exhibition of approximately 100 objects of exemplary quality is devoted to the artistic production inspired by sacred sites and the practice of Buddhist pilgrimage in Asia. It will comprise the first comprehensive look at how pilgrimage traditions are related to the development of visual material in Asia. Sacred objects, textiles, sculpture and paintings will introduce the concepts of pilgrimage motivation, ritual preparation, movement and worship at the sacred destination. It will be divided into the sections: The Buddha and Sacred Site, The Journey, Pilgrims and Memory to illuminate the ways in which Buddhist pilgrimage has been a source of inspiration to artists and craftsmen as well as a motivating force for patrons and collectors. Also included are Asian sacred artefacts, paintings and manuscripts from lands as distant and culturally disparate as India, Japan and Thailand. The artistic production inspired by pilgrimage in the Buddhist traditions of Asia is particularly rich and unique because both physical and mental pilgrimage exists within Buddhist practice. Painted, sculpted and crafted representations of sacred sites are used as aids for visualization by those who are unable or unwilling for a variety of reasons to make a physical pilgrimage themselves.
    As comprehensive catalogue is being published in association with Yale University Press.

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    Old Remember That You Will Die
    Place: Rubin Museum of Art - New York, 150 West 17th Street, USA
    Date: Mar 19, 10 to Aug 16, 10
    Detail: Scheduled to be shown concurrently with `Bardo’, this exhibition which will present works of art that have been used for centuries to prepare the initiate for death and take up the notion of death as revelatory act, which is a distinguishing characteristic of this Tibetan religion.
    The exhibition will demonstrate the manifold representations of death and afterlife in Christianity and Tibetan Buddhism from approximately the 14th century to the present. The various ways death has been viewed throughout history in the West will be explored and, similarly, Tibetan Buddhist imagery of death is used to remind practitioners of their mortality and impermanence as an incentive to diligently make use of this precious human rebirth, where they have an opportunity through religious practice to break from the cycle of suffering. Ritual implements made from human bone, macabre depictions of charnel ground scenes as ideal places for meditation and violent imagery of wrathful deities tearing at corpses, are, among other things, expressions of the traumatic act of slaying the ego, the primary impediment to enlightenment. Death, as a synonym for the endless suffering of cyclic existence, and the theme of death is also used as a metaphor for an entire system of Tantric meditation practice.

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    Old Epic India: Scenes from the Ramayana
    Place: The Metropolitan Museum of Art - New York, 1000 Fifth Avenue, USA
    Date: Mar 24, 10 to Sep 19, 10
    Detail: Among the themes most favored for Indian miniature painting are episodes from the great Indian epic the Ramayama. This classic of early Indian literature is infused with mythology and the legendary exploits of the gods, but above all tells the story of Lord Vishnu in his earthly appearance as Rama, a divine-king revered as the embodiment of nobility and virtue. The mythology of Rama provides the subject matter for an important genre of Indian paintings, and a selection of such works will be exhibited here, along with sculptures and a newly acquired spectacular painted cotton textile depicting a scene from the epic.

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    Old “Barbarian Kingdoms”: Ancient Treasures of South and Southwest China
    Place: Art Institute of Chicago - Chicago, 111 South Michigan Avenue, Illinois, USA
    Date: Apr 03, 10 to Jul 05, 10
    Detail: As the first comprehensive exhibition ever held in North America of the ancient art and culture of Southwest China, “Barbarian Kingdoms”: Ancient Treasures of South and Southwest China will feature more than 150 splendid works of art from the Bronze Age Kingdom of Dian, near modern Kunming in the Yunnan Province, part of the highest plateau on Earth which joins Tibet in the Northwest and extends eastward to south China. The Kingdom of Dian emerged there as a major power during the 4th century B.C. and flourished for nearly 500 years. This exhibition will showcase objects made of bronze, gold, lacquer, and jade that reveal the superb artistry of the Dian. No other culture anywhere in Southeast Asia provides us with such a detailed picture of their customs, rituals, and beliefs. Through these objects, the exhibition will explore ancient Yunnan’s material culture as well as its spiritual world, and aims to make the complex and intriguing art of ancient China accessible to a broad American audience, and to heighten awareness of the role that Yunnan has played in the cultural history of Asia. In addition to art works from Dian, “Barbarian Kingdoms” will also feature objects from neighboring regions in China and Southeast Asia that show Yunnan’s position in a large network of cultural interaction. Bordering Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar and located toward the southwest of central China, the Yunnan region is an important cultural crossroads with a complex history and geography. “Barbarian Kingdoms” promises to break new art historical ground by giving a comprehensive survey of this dynamic region.

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    Old Manga to Mural: The Japanese Sketches of John Thomas
    Place: Russell-Cotes Art Gallery & Museum, Gallery IV - Bournemouth, East Cliff, United Kingdom
    Date: Feb 17, 09 to Apr 30, 10
    Detail: A new exhibition exploring the work of John Thomas, the artist who created the murals and hand-painted glass in the Russell-Cotes' museum-home. Thomas was inspired by the work of some of the great Japanese artists of the early 19th Century, such as Hokusai, Bairei, Zeshin.

    Admission is free.

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    Old Rajasthan Kings and Warriors
    Place: Museum Rietberg - Park-Villa Rieter - Zurich, Gablerstrasse 15, Switzerland
    Date: May 05, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: Rajasthan, the «Land of Kings», is located in the northwestern part of India, between Delhi and today's Pakistan. The area of influence of the king's sons (the Rajput warrior caste) used to be much vaster.
    The Hindu courts in Rajasthan had no choice but to forge an alliance with the Muslim Mughal rulers that had invaded India in the 16th century. The artists working in the workshops at the royal courts of Bundi, Kota, Udaipur, Jaipur and Jodhpur were thus confronted with the stylistic innovations of painting in the Mughal capitals. The artists were stimulated by the new trends in painting and mostly produced religious series of paintings which combined their local style of painting with the more naturalistic approach of the Mughal artists.

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    Old China: Journey to the East
    Place: Willis Museum, Sainsbury Gallery - Basingstoke, Hampshire, Hampshire County Council, The Castle, Market Place, United Kingdom
    Date: Aug 01, 09 to Dec 24, 09
    Detail: This major exhibition offers visitors the chance to encounter artefacts from one of the most important and influential civilisations in world history.
    China: Journey to the East spans 3,000 years of Chinese history and culture, exploring themes of play and performance, technology, belief and festivals, food and drink, and language and writing.
    China has been a major influence on many parts of the world through trade and the movement of peoples. Chinese Diaspora communities form a vital part of the history of many other countries, including Britain.
    This unique exhibition features over 100 objects from the British Museum, the largest loan of Chinese material the Museum has made in the UK.
    The exhibition also includes objects from collections at some of the partner museums and from elsewhere within their regions.

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    Old Ying Mei Duan Exhibition
    Place: Chinese Arts Centre - Manchester, Market Buildings, Thomas Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Aug 25, 09 to Nov 25, 09
    Detail: During her residency at the Centre, Ying Mei will explore expressions of desire and melancholy. An inquisitive observer, she will create a series of performances as site-specific installations driven from the situations she encounters whilst residing in Manchester. For these works Ying Mei adapts a staged persona employing sleep to create a fictitious dream world that questions social conventions and behaviour.

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    Old Fired Earth from China's Golden Age: Ceramics from the Tang Dynasty
    Place: Museum of East Asian Art (MEAA) - Bath, 12 Bennett Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Aug 29, 09 to Dec 06, 09
    Detail: The Tang Dynasty is considered by historians to be a high point in Chinese civilisation, able to reach far and wide with use of the Grand Canal of China, the Silk Road and maritime routes. In this way the Tang were influenced by new technologies and cultures from the Middle East, India, Persia and Central Asia and beyond. The Ceramics produced during this time, often considered China’s “golden age” are among the most innovative produced in China, showing both Chinese aesthetics as well as influences from as far away as Greece.
    The Tang Dynasty was perhaps the most culturally diverse and prosperous period in Chinese history. “Fired Earth from China’s Golden Age: Ceramics of the Tang Dynasty” brings together various ceramics, from bowls and jars through to figures and miniatures that illustrate an important industry during this significant period.

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    Old From the Land of Hidden Charm: Contemporary Paintings from Vietnam
    Place: Oc-Eo Art with Bath Museum of East Asian Art - Bath, 12 Bennett Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Sep 01, 09 to Dec 06, 09
    Detail: Private view: 28th August

    The Museum of East Asian Art’s upcoming exhibition “From the Land of Hidden Charm: Contemporary Paintings from Vietnam” showcases some of modern Vietnam’s best talent from a substantial cross-section of work by artists with international reputations, many of whom have never been seen in the UK before. The exhibition will be open from the 1st of September to the 6th of December 2009.
    Painting has traditionally been a neglected art form in the genres of Vietnamese art. Unlike their counterparts elsewhere in Asia, Vietnamese Buddhist monks and Confucian literati showed little interest in the subject matter. On the contrary, the history of Vietnamese art since the end of the 19th century is a history of painting which, over a century of East-West acculturation, fundamental social and economic change, and several decades of war, has become the strongest form of art in Vietnam.
    This modern history of Vietnamese painting can be divided into three important phases: the Indochina School (1925-1945), the Socialist Realism school (1945 -1985) and the Doi Moi (renovation) art movement (since 1985). This exhibition focuses mainly on the later of the three movements. In the last two decades, young Vietnamese artists have taken advantage of their country’s Doi Moi (renovation policy) to refuse the rules of socialist realism and its monotony of style, form of expression and topic. They turned instead to their country’s rich pre-colonial heritage to revisit traditional themes or explored contemporary issues such as woman in society, globalisation, alienation and ecological issues. In addition, new styles of art have been embraced – pop art, installations, performance and video. Vietnamese Doi Moi art has become the show-room of Vietnam in a new age of free market economy and cultural globalisation.
    From the Land of Hidden Charm: Contemporary Paintings from Vietnam is a collaborative exhibition between the Museum of East Asian Art and Oc-Eo Art. The Museum of East Asian Art, opened in 1993, houses one of the most extensive collections of East Asian art outside London. With a collection of almost 2,000 objects, ranging in date from c.5000 BC to the present day, the Museum offers its visitors a wonderful insight into the art and cultures of China, Japan, Korea and Southeast Asia.
    Launched in October 2006 by Peter Quintana, Oc-Eo Art has rapidly become a leading specialist in contemporary painting from Vietnam, introducing work by both established and emerging artists. Oc-Eo Art regularly exhibits in London, Bath and Harrogate.

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    Old From a Rock to a Hard Place: Constructing Chinese Ceramics
    Place: The Museum of Croydon, Riesco Collection - Croydon, Croydon Clocktower, Katharine Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Sep 05, 09 to Jan 30, 10
    Detail: This small exhibition explores methods of ceramic manufacture including handworking, moulding and throwing techniques.

    Admission is free.

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    Old Buddha's Paradise - Treasures from Ancient Gandhara, Pakistan
    Place: Museum Rietberg - Werner Abegg Gallery - Zurich, Gablerstrasse 15, Switzerland
    Date: Sep 06, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: How can we explain the fact that a 2,000-year-old statue of the Buddha from Gandhara in Pakistan seems just as familiar to us as a sculpture from Greek or Roman antiquity?
    Gandhara, at the foot of the Hindu Kush, was once the intersection of important trade routes. Along these trails a lively cultural exchange took place: Western antique culture reached Gandhara with the Asian campaign of Alexander the Great (356–323 BC). From India came Buddhism, and from central Asia nomadic peoples such as the Kushans. All these different influences merged into a unique Buddhist culture which flourished from the 1st to the 5th centuries.
    The art of Gandhara radiates calm and solemnity. The once splendid monasteries were adorned with reliefs of artistic brilliance, rich in narrative detail: nowhere in Buddhist art have sculptures represented so many episodes from Buddha’s life. Here archaeologists have discovered sculptures which are among the earliest figurative representations of the Buddha.
    Today the region that was home to this formerly flourishing culture has become a focus of political conflict. In 2001 the monumental statues of the Buddha at Bamiyan in Afghanistan – once proud witnesses of Gandharan culture – were dynamited and destroyed. But this exhibition, for which Pakistani museums have loaned their treasures to the West for the first time, shows another side of this region: Gandhara’s past is full of riches, tolerance and cultural diversity.

    An exhibition of the Kunst- und Ausstellungshalle der Bundesrepublik Deutschland, Bonn.
    Supported by Novartis and the Parrotia Foundation. Under the patronage of UNESCO.

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    Old The Power of Dogû: Ceramic Figures from Ancient Japan
    Place: The British Museum, Room 91 - London, Great Russell Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Sep 10, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: International exhibition of approximately 70 prehistoric ceramic figures known as dogû, many designated as National Treasures or Important Cultural Properties by the Japanese Government and exhibited outside Japan for the first time.

    Sponsored by Mitsubishi Corporation.

    Admission is free.

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    Old London-Tokyo-Nagasaki: Prints and Drawings by Chris Orr RA
    Place: The Daiwa Anglo-Japanese Foundation, Daiwa Foundation, Japan House - London, 13/14 Cornwall Terrace, United Kingdom
    Date: Sep 14, 09 to Dec 11, 09
    Detail: Former Professor of Printmaking at the Royal College of Art, Orr’s work has been shown all over the world including the Victoria and Albert Museum.

    This exhibition is a part of the JAPAN-UK 150 celebrations.

    Admission is free.

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    Old Crated Rooms for Iceland - Yoshitomo Nara + graf
    Place: The Reykjavik Art Museum - Reykjavik, Tryggvagata 17, Iceland
    Date: Sep 17, 09 to Dec 31, 09
    Detail: In this exhibition the world renowned Japanese artist Yoshitomo Nara shows an installation that he has made especially for the Museum in collaboration with the Japanese design collaborative graf. Within a group of apparently regular shipping crates, visitors will find paintings, drawings and sculptures by Nara. Nara is often associated with the contemporary Japanese Pop art movement, which is known as `Superflat’. Inspired by the Japanese comic book tradition, Manga, his famous depictions of children usually shows them with large heads and enormous eyes.

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    Old Exhibition by Anish Kapoor
    Place: Royal Academy of Arts - Piccadilly, London, Burlington House, United Kingdom
    Date: Sep 26, 09 to Dec 11, 09
    Detail: Elected a Royal Academician in 1999, Anish Kapoor is internationally regarded as one of the most influential and pioneering sculptors of his generation and is celebrated for works which enter into a profound spiritual engagement with the viewer. The centrepiece of the exhibition will be the monumental Svayambh, a site specific piece tailored to the architecture of the Royal Academy's Main Galleries, reflecting Kapoor's exploration of sculptural works that actively participate in their own formation. Another highlight will be Shooting into the Corner, a work of extraordinary complexity and drama that evolves over time and will constantly change throughout the duration of the exhibition. The exhibition will also contain a number of signature works by Kapoor from different moments in the artist's career, such as pigment works and stainless steel reflective sculptures, as well as newly created works, including a major sculpture in the Annenberg Courtyard.

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    Old Ivory from Ceylon - Renaissance Luxury Items
    Place: Museum Rietberg - Novartis Gallery - Zürich, Switzerland
    Date: Oct 04, 09 to Jan 17, 10
    Detail: The exhibition features fine 16th-century ivory carvings from Sri Lanka. Commissioned by the Portuguese, these precious works of art were sold to European nobility for display in their cabinets. The exquisitely carved pieces, enthralling in their exotic beauty and mysterious iconography, are evidence of the economic and cultural ties linking Europe and Asia. Accompanying catalogue in German and English.

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    Old The Dragon's Gift: The Arts of Bhutan
    Place: Musée Guimet - Paris, 6, place d'Iéna, France
    Date: Oct 06, 09 to Jan 25, 10
    Detail: A groundbreaking exhibition of rare religious Buddhist art with a special focus on ancient ritual Buddhist dances which have been preserved intact in Bhutan. The exhibition coincides with the end of the lunar year marking the 100th anniversary of the Royal Wangchuk dynasty in Bhutan. A catalogue will include essays by leading scholars on the history, cultural traditions and artistic techniques of Bhutan with detailed entries on each exhibition object included in the exhibition. Objects in the exhibition will comprise primarily paintings, sculptures, clay, stone and metalwork, textiles and ritual objects. The focus is on the religious Buddhist arts of Bhutan but it also incorporates the performing arts such as ancient ritual dances. It will also include a component on the traditional crafts of Bhutan, such as clay sculpture, textile weaving and metal work. In addition to the presentation of objects, a full program of lectures, films and demonstrations of dance and indigenous crafts during the run of the exhibition in Honolulu. After debuting at the Academy, the exhibition will travel to the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and Rubin Museum in New York.

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    Old The Arts of Islam : Masterpieces from the Khalili Collection
    Place: Institut du Monde Arabe - Paris, Cedex, 1, rue des Fossés-Saint-Bernard, Place Mohammed-V, France
    Date: Oct 06, 09 to Mar 14, 10
    Detail: A magnificent exhibition The Arts of Islam: Masterpieces from the Khalili Collection will take place at the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris from 6 October 2009 to 14 March 2010. The aim of the exhibition is to promote the understanding and appreciation of Islamic art.
    Some 500 selected pieces from the fabulous Nasser D Khalili Collection of Islamic Art will be on view, most of which have not been exhibited in Europe before. The pieces span thirteen centuries and include richly illuminated copies of the Holy Qur’an as well as secular manuscripts and paintings, magnificent wall hangings and carpets, exquisite ceramics and glass, fine metalwork and sumptuous gold, jewels and lacquerware together with carvings in wood and stone. The exhibition will display these treasures in three main sections, Faith, Wisdom and Destiny, to illustrate not only the relationship between art and the sacred, but also what is meant by the term ‘Islamic art’.
    In this context, the term ‘Islamic art’ is used in the first place to describe art produced by Muslim artists for Muslim patrons (although there are numerous works in Islamic styles produced by, or for, non-Muslims). It reflects the geographical and cultural diversity of the lands of Islam, covering a multitude of forms from architectural decoration to the arts of the book and the decorative arts such as glass, metalwork, pottery, jewellery and textiles. The term ‘Islamic’ does not entail that this art is necessarily religious in content or use: much of it is secular in nature. Instead, it is ‘Islamic’ because its artistic vocabulary is deeply rooted in Muslim philosophical thought, so that the creative expression of the various Muslim peoples is shaped by the spirit and the doctrines of the Muslim faith.
    Calligraphy is especially important, as the means by which the Qur’anic text was recorded and transmitted. The various scripts, moreover, play an important role not only in manuscripts but also in architecture, ceramics, glass, textiles and other media. Contrary to popular assumption, figural imagery also plays an important role in Islamic art. Although the representation of the human form and animals was not permitted in a religious context, this rule did not extend to secular art.
    The Arts of Islam illustrates the breadth of artistic achievement in the Islamic world from the 7th century to the early 20th century with pieces from China and India to Turkey, from Iran to Egypt, and from Iraq to Tunisia and Spain. Objects from the early Islamic dynasties of the 7th to 10th centuries demonstrate the development of the new Islamic style which was still influenced to some extent by the artistic traditions of the preceding Sasanian and Byzantine periods.
    Subsequently, the medieval Islamic period from the 10th to early 13th centuries was a time of exceptional artistic production involving new materials such as lustre-painted ceramics and paper. It was also marked by a dramatic evolution of manuscript decoration, seen in the magnificent display of illuminated Qur’ans.
    Following the Mongol invasions of the 13th century, Islamic art featured refined styles heavily influenced by the cultures of Central Asia and China. Objects of particular interest are a saddle with delicate filigree gold trappings, dating from the 13th-14th century, and Rashid al-Din’s Jami‘ al-Tawarikh (Compendium of Chronicles), the first Muslim universal history, written in 1314-15, seen through the eyes of the Mongol conquerors.
    An increase in the production of illuminated manuscripts, in particular wonderfully detailed Persian and Ottoman miniature paintings, the development and profusion of blue and white ceramic wares as well as the emergence of fine Iznik pottery, are expressed in the splendid display of objects from the Safavid and Ottoman periods in the 16th to 19th centuries. One of the highlights of this display is the ten folios from the Shahnamah (The Book of Kings), made for the Safavid ruler Shah Tahmasp (1514-1576) who was himself a painter of miniatures. Colourful enamelled objects from Mughal India, intricately executed jewellery studded with precious stones, and finely woven carpets and textiles also feature strongly in these periods.
    This breathtaking exhibition ends with pieces from the later 19th century such as enamelled pocket watches with portraits of rulers and delicately painted lacquer pen boxes which clearly show the impact of European influence on the arts of Islam during this period.
    The Nasser D Khalili Collection of Islamic Art, with some 20,000 works, is one of the largest and most comprehensive in the world, encompassing the entire history of Islamic art from its beginnings in the 7th century until the present day. The entire Collection is being published under the auspices of the Khalili Family Trust and will comprise 31 volumes in total, 17 of which are already available.
    The Arts of Islam: Masterpieces from the Khalili Collection has previously been exhibited in Australia and Abu Dhabi. The Institut du Monde Arabe welcomes to Europe for the first time this collection of exceptional objects that bear testimony to the brilliance and artistic sophistication of the cultures of Islam.

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    Old Treasures of the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)
    Place: Brunei Gallery, SOAS, University of London - London, Thornhaugh Street, Russell Square, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 08, 09 to Dec 12, 09
    Detail: This permanent rotating display is a selection of the wealth of rarely seen material belonging to SOAS and has seven sections reflecting the main regions studied by the School, included is material from East Asia; Southeast Asia; South Asia and the Himalayas; Middle East; Africa and European Views of Africa and Asia. Amongst the many objects on display are beautiful examples of illuminated Islamic manuscripts, Chinese and Japanese paintings and prints, South East Asian Buddhist sculpture, textiles and metal work and modernist paintings from South Asia and Africa. One of the exhibition’s main attractions is a Mughal copy of the 16th century Anvar-i-Suhayli, this manuscript produced for Emperor Akbar is an extremely rare illustrated example of animal fables. This manuscript has now been digitized and visitors can view highlights on a new interactive stand alone installation ‘Turning the Pages’.

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    Old Maharaja: the Splendour of India's Royal Courts
    Place: Victoria & Albert Museum, North Courts - London, Cromwell Road, South Kensington, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 10, 09 to Jan 17, 10
    Detail: The word 'maharaja' (literally 'great king') conjures up images of fantasy and spectacle. The heyday of the maharajas began in earnest after the collapse of the Mughal empire in the early 18th century. The exhibition will open with this period of chaos and adventure and will close at the end of British rule in 1947, when Indian princes acceded their territories into the modern states of India and Pakistan.
    The show will explore the extraordinary culture of princely India, showcasing rich and varied objects that reflect different aspects of royal life. The exhibits will include both Indian and Western works, featuring paintings, photography, textiles and dress, jewellery, jewelled objects, metalwork and furniture. These sensational works will be explored within a broader historical context of princely life and ideals, patronage, court culture and alliances.

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    Old Earth Alert: Photographic Response to Climate Change
    Place: Korean Cultural Centre UK (Northumberland Avenue Entrance) - London, Ground Floor, Grand Buildings, 1-3 Strand, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 13, 09 to Nov 28, 09
    Detail: The exhibition offers different photographic perspectives of Korean and international artists relating to the magnitude of the problems of climate change and global warming. Co-curated by Colin Jacobson and Stephanie Seungmin Kim. In collaboration with Panos Pictures.

    Admission is free.

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    Old Surimono: The Art of Allusion in Japanese Prints
    Place: Museum of East Asian Art (Museum für Ostasiatische Kunst) - Cologne, Universitätsstraße 100, D-50674, Germany
    Date: Oct 31, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: In autumn of 2009 the museum celebrates the centenary of its founding with this a conference and a series of exhibition. This show presents 120 Japanese colour woodblock prints which were published by circles of poets as particularly precious and luxurious private editions (surimono). The collection of the artist Marino Lusy (1880-1954) owned by the Museum für Gestaltung in Zurich has been on permanent loan at the Museum Rietberg since 2005, where it was studied by an international research team headed by John Carpenter, professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) of the University of London. The Lusy Collection is among the most important Surimono collections in Europe, and its outstanding quality and excellent state of conservation testify to Lusy's impressive connoisseurship and expertise. Part I of the collection was first presented as a special exhibition at the Museum Rietberg from 7 December 2008 to 13 April 2009. The Cologne exhibition shows part II.

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    Old The Heart of Enlightenment: Buddhist Art from China (550-600)
    Place: Museum of East Asian Art (Museum für Ostasiatische Kunst) - Cologne, Universitätsstraße 100, D-50674, Germany
    Date: Oct 31, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: In autumn of 2009 the museum celebrates the centenary of its founding with this a conference and a series of exhibitions. This show presents ink-rubbings of monumental texts which devout Buddhists chiselled into rocks in the mountains of Shandong province during the Northern Qi dynasty. The aim of this grand project was to transform the world into a Buddhist topography. Alongside these rubbings, the exhibition also presents Buddhist stone sculpture from the same period. Most of the exhibits from the collection of the Cologne museum were acquired by its founder, Adolf Fischer. Together with loans from the Museum Rietberg Zurich and loans from private collections they provide an insight into one of the great periods of Buddhist stone sculpture in China. Research of these rock inscriptions started only a few years ago. They cast a new light on the sculpture of that period. The exhibition was organised in collaboration with the Institute of East Asian Art History, Heidelberg University, the Heidelberg Academy of Sciences and in cooperation with the Department of Historical Monuments of the City of Zoucheng in Shandong province.

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    Old Aspects of Japanese Contemporary Craft
    Place: Embassy of Japan - London, 101-104 Piccadilly, United Kingdom
    Date: Nov 02, 09 to Nov 27, 09
    Detail: An exhibition presenting various aspects of contemporary craft inspired by Japanese materials, techniques and design with weaving, lacquer ware, ceramists and textile artists.

    This exhibition is a part of the JAPAN-UK 150 celebrations.

    Admission is free.

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    Old Tropical Arcadia - Early Photography in Ceylon
    Place: Asian Art Museum, National Museums in Berlin - 14195 Berlin, Lansstraße 8, Germany
    Date: Nov 05, 09 to Jan 31, 10
    Detail: Building on its activities in the field of historic photography, the Asian Art Museum Berlin is presenting to the public for the first time an exquisite selection of rare vintage prints from Ceylon. The exhibit titled Tropical Arcadia – Early Photography in Ceylon features albumen prints and stereoscopic photography from two Berlin private collections of work of the 1870s through the 1890s. The exhibition leaves no doubt about the outstanding quality of colonial photography in British Ceylon. The works shown are concentrated on picturesque landscape photography and portraits of plants and these areas are supplemented with still lifes of tropical fruit.
    Picturesque landscape photography in particular harkens back to a long tradition in South Asian photography. However, botanical studies in the form of self-consciously artistic photo portraits were an almost entirely unknown commodity in the photography of the Indian subcontinent before the 1870s.
    Two studios in particular dominated in the island’s photographic production at the end of the nineteenth century. In addition to the work of William Louis Henry Skeen, who ran one of the most productive photography studios in Ceylon as of the late 1860s, the work of the studio of Charles Thomas Scowen was specialized in botanical photography to an extent incomparable with their island contemporaries. Scowen’s work was promoted by the company Colombo Apothecaries starting in the 1890s and many of his pictures were taken in ancient royal Peradeniya Garden, which the British rededicated as a botanical garden around1820. This was the area where Scowen established his studio. His commercial success and the popularity of just such photographs are perhaps the consummate examples of British affinity for gardens and landscaping.

    An exhibition catalogue will be published.

    Curator of the exhibition: Raffael Dedo Gadebusch
    Assistant Curator: Janine Proll

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    Old Enamels of the World 1700-2000 from the Khalili Collections
    Place: State Hermitage Museum - St Petersburg, Dvortsovaya Naberezhnaya, 34, Russia
    Date: Dec 08, 09 to Mar 14, 10
    Detail: The exhibition will focus on enamelwork of the past three hundred years, encompassing objects produced in all the major centres of enamelling in Europe, Russia, America, the Islamic lands, China and Japan. It will be the first time that any works from this collection have been shown and coincides with the publication of a major volume on the subject based on the collection’s holdings. The exhibition will feature some 320 pieces selected from some 1200 works in the enamel collection.

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    Old Display: Cabinets of Curiosities (*)
    Place: The Potteries Museum & Art Gallery - Stoke on Trent, Staffordshire, Bethesda Street, Cultural Quarter, Hanley, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 01, 10 to Jan 31, 10
    Detail: A new display in the Changing Fashions gallery showcases some of the Museum’s East Asian decorative arts collections, from jade mountains to portable Buddhist shrines, from ivory ships of fortune to lacquer warriors.

    Admission is free.

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    Old Telling Images of China: Narrative and Figure Paintings, 15th-20th Century, from the Shanghai Museum (*)
    Place: Chester Beatty Library - Dublin, Ireland
    Date: Jan 01, 10 to May 01, 10
    Detail: This show comprising a major loan exhibition of thirty-eight figure paintings from the Shanghai Museum comprising scroll and album paintings from Ming, Qing and early Republican period explores how stories and tales from folklore, religious lore and literary culture were translated into pictorial images in paintings across six centuries in China. The exhibition is presented through four sometimes overlapping, sometimes interweaving themes, namely ‘crossings’ - stories about exiles, loyalists and rustics; the supernatural world of popular religion; models and exemplars in history; and finally, emperor-concubine and scholar-beauty romances. There are artworks which illustrate texts inscribed on or beside the paintings themselves. In other cases, the stories illustrated are part of oral history, so that the paintings served as visual props for the viewer to retell popular tales. Collectively, these artworks give a taste of China’s rich mythology and lyric tradition, and show how successive generations of artists gave new life to learning, belief and leisure in pictorial images fit for their own times.

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    Old China: Journey to the East
    Place: Museum and Winter Gardens, Sunderland - Sunderland, Burdon Road, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 29, 10 to May 09, 10
    Detail: This major exhibition offers visitors the chance to encounter artefacts from one of the most important and influential civilisations in world history.
    China: Journey to the East spans 3,000 years of Chinese history and culture, exploring themes of play and performance, technology, belief and festivals, food and drink, and language and writing.
    China has been a major influence on many parts of the world through trade and the movement of peoples. Chinese Diaspora communities form a vital part of the history of many other countries, including Britain.
    This unique exhibition features over 100 objects from the British Museum, the largest loan of Chinese material the Museum has made in the UK.
    The exhibition also includes objects from collections at some of the partner museums and from elsewhere within their regions.

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    Old The Dragon's Gift: The Arts of Bhutan
    Place: Museum of East Asian Art (Museum für Ostasiatische Kunst) - Cologne (Köln), Universitätsstraße 100, D-50674, Germany
    Date: Feb 20, 10 to May 23, 10
    Detail: A groundbreaking exhibition of rare religious Buddhist art with a special focus on ancient ritual Buddhist dances which have been preserved intact in Bhutan. The exhibition coincides with the end of the lunar year marking the 100th anniversary of the Royal Wangchuk dynasty in Bhutan. A catalogue will include essays by leading scholars on the history, cultural traditions and artistic techniques of Bhutan with detailed entries on each exhibition object included in the exhibition. Objects in the exhibition will comprise primarily paintings, sculptures, clay, stone and metalwork, textiles and ritual objects. The focus is on the religious Buddhist arts of Bhutan but it also incorporates the performing arts such as ancient ritual dances. It will also include a component on the traditional crafts of Bhutan, such as clay sculpture, textile weaving and metal work. In addition to the presentation of objects, a full program of lectures, films and demonstrations of dance and indigenous crafts during the run of the exhibition in Honolulu. After debuting at the Academy, the exhibition will travel to the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and Rubin Museum in New York.

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    Old China: Journey to the East
    Place: York Art Gallery - York, Exhibition Square, United Kingdom
    Date: May 22, 10 to Sep 05, 10
    Detail: This major exhibition offers visitors the chance to encounter artefacts from one of the most important and influential civilisations in world history.
    China: Journey to the East spans 3,000 years of Chinese history and culture, exploring themes of play and performance, technology, belief and festivals, food and drink, and language and writing.
    China has been a major influence on many parts of the world through trade and the movement of peoples. Chinese Diaspora communities form a vital part of the history of many other countries, including Britain.
    This unique exhibition features over 100 objects from the British Museum, the largest loan of Chinese material the Museum has made in the UK.
    The exhibition also includes objects from collections at some of the partner museums and from elsewhere within their regions.

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    Old The Dragon's Gift: The Arts of Bhutan
    Place: Museum Rietberg - Zurich, Switzerland
    Date: Jul 04, 10 to Oct 17, 10
    Detail: A groundbreaking exhibition of rare religious Buddhist art with a special focus on ancient ritual Buddhist dances which have been preserved intact in Bhutan. The exhibition coincides with the end of the lunar year marking the 100th anniversary of the Royal Wangchuk dynasty in Bhutan. A catalogue will include essays by leading scholars on the history, cultural traditions and artistic techniques of Bhutan with detailed entries on each exhibition object included in the exhibition. Objects in the exhibition will comprise primarily paintings, sculptures, clay, stone and metalwork, textiles and ritual objects. The focus is on the religious Buddhist arts of Bhutan but it also incorporates the performing arts such as ancient ritual dances. It will also include a component on the traditional crafts of Bhutan, such as clay sculpture, textile weaving and metal work. In addition to the presentation of objects, a full program of lectures, films and demonstrations of dance and indigenous crafts during the run of the exhibition in Honolulu. After debuting at the Academy, the exhibition will travel to the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and Rubin Museum in New York.

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    Asia USA & Canada | Europe & Africa

    Old The Path of Buddha
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room T5, Honkan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Jul 27, 07 to Apr 04, 10
    Detail: This display traces the development of Buddhist statues from Gandhara (Ancient India), China, the Korean Peninsula, and Japan to provide insights about how Buddhist beliefs and statues developed in each region.
    Buddhism is a religion based on the teachings, known as dharma, of Prince Siddhartha Gautama, who lived in India around the 5th century B.C. He attained "Enlightenment" and became Sakyamuni Buddha when he was 35, and spent the rest of his life teaching his insights to others. After his death, his followers continued to practice and spread his teachings. Following his cremation, the Buddha's ashes and relics, known as sarira, were deposited in stupas, originally mound-like structures. Buddhist art developed when stupas were decorated with reliefs that depicted stories of Buddha and other designs.
    Initially, Buddha was not presented as a human figure. This changed around the 1st century A.D. and Buddhists began to worship the statues. Over time, Buddhism spread to other areas, where statues were crafted and worshipped in various forms.

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    Old Stunning Decorative Porcelains from the Ch'ien-lung Reign
    Place: National Palace Museum, Gallery 306 - Taipei, 221 Chih-shan Rd., Sec. 2; Shih-lin, Taiwan
    Date: Oct 10, 08 to Jun 06, 10
    Detail: The fa-lang-ts'ai porcelains in the collection of the National Palace Museum can be divided into two categories, painted fa-lang-ts'ai porcelains and yang-ts'ai porcelains. Masterpieces of unprecedented quality, these works had earned themselves the favor of the Ch'ien-lung emperor. During his reign, they were kept in the Ch'ien-ch'ing-kung Palace, where the emperor would admire them. The present exhibition concentrates on yang-ts'ai porcelains, although a number of fa-lang-ts'ai porcelains are also on view to demonstrate the differences between the two.
    The Museum has in its collection more than five hundred fa-lang-ts'ai porcelains, with the majority made between the 5th and 9th years of the Ch'ien-lung reign (1741-1744). They are, in fact, a manifestation of the emperor's vibrancy and confidence in the early years of his 60-year reign, a period of great achievement in many spheres, as well as in the arts. At the request of the emperor, the supervisor of the imperial kilns at Ching-te-chen by the name of T'ang Ying (1682-1756) personally oversaw the production of the imperial wares twice a year, in the spring and then again in the autumn. It was here that T'ang developed a continuous line of innovative techniques to please his emperor, to produce porcelains which would be admired as "the work of the gods," such as the openwork revolving vases. It was also T'ang Ying that developed the "pattern of flower brocade" technique of incised decoration, which brought out the best in the enamel colors of yang-ts'ai. T'ang Ying was also the first to employ the term yang-ts'ai to refer to these porcelains. The Chinese character yang hints at the connection to the West, as it means "ocean" and, by extension, objects from overseas. Also, the decoration on these porcelains employed Western painting techniques. The yang-ts'ai porcelains had the personal stamps of Ch'ien-lung all over them, bearing poetry composed by his own hand as well as imperial seals belonging to him. Clearly, then, the Ch'ien-lung emperor greatly admired these porcelains, and perhaps even saw them as an innovative style adequately reflecting his reign when at the height of his powers.
    Both yang-ts'ai and fa-lang-ts'ai porcelains used fa-lang enamel glazes, and this accounts in some way for the confusion that has surrounded them for many years. In fact, there are differences between the two in terms of where and how they were manufactured, as well as the decoration, poetry, seals and reign marks used. In the early Republican period the confusion was further exacerbated by the identification of the yang-ts'ai porcelains with the term fen-ts'ai. This exhibition will not only show 110 examples of yang-ts'ai porcelains, it will also seek to clarify the differences between yang-ts'ai and painted fa-lang-ts'ai porcelains, and clear up the confusion over the issue of fen-ts'ai wares.

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    Old Reminiscence: Photographs of Old Macao Macao Museum of Art
    Place: Macao Museum of Art, Macao Culture Centre - NAPE Macao, Av. Xian Xing Hai S/N, Macao
    Date: Mar 06, 09 to Dec 31, 09
    Detail: The exhibition presents 50 photography of the old Macao during the 1920's and 1960's.

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    Old New Literati Painting (*)
    Place: Hong Kong Museum of Art - Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, 10 Salisbury Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Mar 30, 09 to Dec 31, 09
    Detail: The genre of new literati painting can be described as a convergence of artists with common goals that coincided with various cultural movements against the background of the rapid changes in the 1980s and 1990s that marked the `open door' policy and reforms in China.

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    Old A Selection of Chinese Paintings from the Xubaizhai Collection (*)
    Place: Hong Kong Museum of Art - Tsim Sha Tsui, Kowloon, 10 Salisbury Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Apr 07, 09 to Dec 31, 09
    Detail: The Xubaizhai Gallery of Chinese Painting and Calligraphy was built in 1992 to provide a permanent home for internationally acclaimed Xubaizhai Collection donated to the Hong Kong Museum of Art in 1989 by Low Chuck Tiew. Its inauguration was also a tribute to the generous gesture of an eminent connoisseur in turning an important private collection into a valuable public one. The collection encompasses works dated from the Northern Dynasties through to the 20th century and is particularly strong in works by the masters of the major schools of the Ming and Qing dynasties, including the Wu School, the SongjiangSchool, the Four Monks, the OrthodoxSchool and the Eight Eccentrics of Yangzhou. The present exhibition features works of painting selected from these two periods. Additionally, this selection of the Xubaizhai Collection provides the viewer with an opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of the characteristics of the collection and Low's aesthetic leanings.

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    Old Exhibition of the Fine Arts Collection from MAM
    Place: Macao Museum of Art, Macao Culture Centre - NAPE Macao, Av. Xian Xing Hai S/N, Macao
    Date: Apr 22, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: The exhibition showcases over one hundred works of art from Macao, including watercolours, Chinese paintings, prints and contemporary paintings in oils, acrylics, mixed media and so forth. Some of these works are selected from the list of 300 works shown in the exhibition ‘Confluence: Collection from the Macao Museum of Art’ held at the National Art Museum of China in Beijing during March this year. Macao is a metaphor for the fusion of Chinese and Western cultures. Upon arriving in Macao in early 1825, British painter George Chinnery introduced watercolour painting contributing greatly to the promotion of this genre and making it the mainstream painting of Macao in the 20th century. Inspired by the streets, houses, churches, temples and customs of Macao, the artists have captured the unique charm of the city from myriad angles and with insightful brushwork. From the watercolours exhibited in this exhibition that depict the landscape of Macao, audiences can glimpse the changes that occurred in this small city from the 1940s to the present day.

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    Old Icon of an Era: the Dr Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum 1929.6.1
    Place: Dr Sun Yat-sen Museum, Permanent Exhibition Gallery, 1/F - Central, 7 Castle Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Sep 04, 09 to Mar 17, 10
    Detail: Featuring over 170 historical photographs and invaluable cultural relics, this exhibition introduces the organization of Dr Sun’s funeral, which includes the construction of the Dr Sun Yat-sen Mausoleum and the removal of Dr Sun’s coffin from Beijing to Nanjing. It probes into the profound meanings of the grand funeral and throws light on how these implicit messages constitute the mausoleum and the grand funeral of Sun Yat-sen the icon of the era.

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    Old Against or Away: Artworks by Ming Loyalists in Early Qing Dynasty from the Collection of Shanghai Museum
    Place: Macao Museum of Art, Macao Culture Centre - NAPE Macao, Av. Xian Xing Hai S/N, Macao
    Date: Sep 05, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Over 300 examples of calligraphy, paintings and seals from the Shanghai Museum reveal the innermost sentiments of literati during the turbulent period from the late Ming to early Qing period. The wor works reveal the artists’ pursuit of profound art and the ‘innermost feeling’ underlying their brushstrokes.

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    Old A Century of China
    Place: Hong Kong Museum of History, Special Exhibition Gallery - Hong Kong, Hong Kong
    Date: Sep 23, 09 to Jan 04, 10
    Detail: This event is organized by the museum to mark the 60th anniversary of the PRC. It will feature historical photos, documents and artefacts with a view to illustrating how China has developed from a dynastic empire into a strong and prosperous country. It will also introduce its social and economic development over the past century. 115 sets of collections will be on loan from the National Museum of China, among which 36 items are grade one cultural relics. Highlights include the jade seal of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, Zhou Enlai's diary about his stay in Japan, as well as a volleyball with the autographs of the members of China National Women's Volleyball Team. Other exhibits include the commemorative banner in recognition of Hong Kong Special Administrative Region’s rescue work in the earthquake-stricken areas of Sichuan province and the training spacesuit of Mr Yang Liwei from the Hong Kong Science Museum.

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    Old The Prosperous Cities: A Selection of Paintings from the Liaoning Provincial Museum
    Place: Hong Kong Museum of Art - Tsimshatsui, Kowloon, 10 Salisbury Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Sep 25, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: This exhibition features 15 paintings from the Ming and Qing periods on the unique theme of prosperous cities. Most of the exhibits, once prized possessions of emperor Qianlong, are representative works in the history of painting. Offering an insight into China's urban wealth during the Ming and Qing periods, they include significant paintings such as Along the River during the Qingming Festival by Qiu Ying, Ten Views of West Lake by Wang Yuanqi and Prosperous Suzhou by Xu Yang.
    The centrepiece of the exhibition is the handscroll by Xu Yang. Completed in 1759 during Qianlong's second Southern Inspection Tour, the scroll painting provides a panoramic but extraordinarily detailed view of 18th century Suzhou. In it, Xu painstakingly depicts people from all walks of life – from fishermen, woodcutters and tillers to merchants, literati and civil officers – as well as Suzhou's fascinating scenery, in which many prosperous aspects of the city during the High Qing era are emphasized.

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    Old Garden and Cosmos: The Royal Paintings of Jodhpur (*)
    Place: The National Museum of India - New Delhi, India
    Date: Oct 01, 09 to Dec 01, 09
    Detail: Newly discovered paintings from the royal collection of Jodhpur form the core of this groundbreaking exhibition of 61 paintings and a silk-embroidered tent. From the desert palace at Nagaur the paintings reveal the emergence of a uniquely sensuous garden aesthetic in the 18th century; these delightful images present royal pastimes and the divine exploits of Hindu deities Krishna and Rama. The exhibition explores the dramatic shift that occurred in 19th century Jodhpur, when paintings of yoga philosophy led to a sublimely minimal aesthetic; these startling images, 4 feet in width, are unprecedented in Indian art. Ten 17th-century Jodhpur paintings borrowed from museum collections in India, Europe and the US reveal the idiom from which the innovations of later Jodhpur painting emerged.

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    Old Beyond Frame: Philippine Photomedia
    Place: Ateneo Art Gallery, Ateneo de Manila University - Quezon City, Manila, G/F, Rizal Library, Katipunan Road, Loyola Heights, Philippines
    Date: Oct 01, 09 to Dec 15, 09
    Detail: The exhibit draws together 14 very different artists practicing at the edge, moving between traditional photographic genres and contemporary photo-based installations, and weaving narratives and notions of the self and place across a group of art works that spans more than 3 decades. The exhibit is an astute observation of the development of a medium locally and the pulse of an art scene now.
    Including works by Ateneo Art Award winners Poklong Anading and MM Yu, who will be shown alongside talents such as Romina Diaz, Ringo Bunoan, Christina Dy, Lena Cobangbang, Gina Osterloh, Rachel Rillo and Steve Tirona, this generation of artists will be anchored by historic works such as Lani Maestro’s “A voice remembers nothing”, works by the pioneering Philippine photographer Mario Co and installation based photo-works by senior artists Noberto Roldan, Gerry Tan and Tony Twigg.

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    Old NHB search for Singaporeans born on 3 December 1959 - 1989 for unique photography showcase
    Place: City Hall Building - Singapore, Singapore
    Date: Oct 02, 09 to Dec 03, 09
    Detail: December 3rd 2009 is the 50th anniversary of Singapore’s self-governance. In the lead up to the celebrations to mark this important date, the National Heritage Board (NHB) is inviting Singaporeans born on 3 December between the years of 1959 and 1989 to come forward to participate in a special photography showcase which will be launched at Singapore’s historic City Hall.
    Participants will have the opportunity take part in a photo shoot with an award-winning photographer and to share their thoughts on celebrating their birthday on the same date as this significant national milestone. They’ll also be asked to share their hopes and aspirations for the future of Singapore.
    If you were born on 3 December between 1959 to 1989, please contact Ms. Caitlyn Ong (DID: 6332 4494, email: caitlyn_ong@nhb.gov.sg) with your name, date of birth, NRIC number and contact details. The first 30 people born on 3rd December to come forward will also receive $50 NTUC Fairprice vouchers.
    Terms and conditions apply.

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    Old Masterpieces of Japanese Negoro Ware
    Place: The Okura Shukokan Museum of Fine Arts (Hotel Okura) - Tokyo, 2-10-4 Toranomon, Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Oct 03, 09 to Dec 13, 09
    Detail: A special exhibition organized by London Gallery Ltd. A fully illustrated catalogue will be available.

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    Old War On Wheels
    Place: Peranakan Museum - Singapore, 39 Armenian Street Singapore 179941, Singapore
    Date: Nov 14, 09 to Nov 28, 09
    Detail: As part of Explore Singapore!, the National Heritage Board (NHB) is organising experiential and interactive bus tours around some of Singapore’s most significant World War II history sites that have been long forgotten. Day and night tours have been designed to appeal to all ages and promise a fun-filled experience for you and your friends and family. You will be able to discover little known places in Singapore such as the Johor Battery and Memories of Old Ford Factory; visit the landing site of the Japanese in Singapore; use mock banana notes as money in exchange for food; and stand at the grounds where soldiers fought one of the fiercest battles here during WWII! Come and discover Singapore’s history in a refreshing way!

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    Old Breaking Forecast: 8 Key Figures of China’s New Generation of Artists
    Place: Ullens Center for Contemporary Art - Beijing, 798 Art District, No.4 Jiuxianqiao Lu, Chaoyang District, People's Republic Of China
    Date: Nov 15, 09 to Feb 28, 10
    Detail: A groundbreaking exhibition presenting new and recent works by the most compelling emerging and mid-career artists working throughout China today: Cao Fei, Chu Yun, Liu Wei, Qiu Zhijie, Sun Yuan & Peng Yu, Xu Zhen, Yang Fudong and Zheng Guogu. It combines genres of painting, sculpture, installation and photography to define the future of Chinese contemporary art for years to come.
    Complimented by a comprehensive, full-colour catalogue, as well as a wide range of artist’s talks, public programs and educational events for both children and adults.

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    Old Opening Exhibition: Nezu Zeizan - Tea and Art
    Place: Nezu Museum - Tokyo, 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Nov 18, 09 to Dec 23, 09
    Detail: One of the eight exhibitions at the museum to celebrate the reopening of the newly renovated museum.

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    Old The Little Explorer’s Travels
    Place: Asian Civilisations Museum - Singapore, 1 Empress Place Singapore 179555, Singapore
    Date: Nov 22, 09
    Detail: As part of Explore Singapore! 2009, children are invited to follow the footsteps of famous 13th century adventurer Marco Polo in his exciting travels through Asia! They’ll journey through the colourful worlds of China, India and the Middle East with exhilarating theatrical performances, drumming workshops and kids’ crafts and activities. You can experience an afternoon of fun with your little ones as they get their faces painted like a Chinese opera actor, listen to tales from the Arabian Nights and dress up in exotic Indian outfits while collecting free giveaways, ice-cream and goodie bags!

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    Old I Love Museums
    Place: National Museum of Singapore - Singapore, 93 Stamford Road, Singapore
    Date: Nov 27, 09
    Detail: Explore Singapore! 2009 presents I Love Museums – a full day of exciting and interactive activities at Singapore’s oldest museum. Through activities such as photography workshops, wine and chocolate tasting to soulful acapella and a relaxing contemporary art walk, come experience and fall in love with the museum together with your friends and loved ones. This will be a delightful afternoon where one can enjoy and be entertained in the cool serenity of the National Museum of Singapore.

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    Old Medicine and Art: Imagining a Future for Life and Love
    Place: Mori Art Museum - Tokyo, ROPPONGI HILLS MORI TOWER (53F), 6-10-1 ROPPONGI, MINATO-KU, Japan
    Date: Nov 28, 09 to Feb 28, 10
    Detail: Nothing is so close and yet so little known to us as the human body. From ancient times, we have sought to elucidate its mechanisms and through developments in medical technologies, prolong our own deaths. At the same time, the body has always been the artist’s subject and inspiration - one that is often used as a metaphor for the whole world. The theme of this exhibition is the body as the meeting place of art and science. With the help of the British Wellcome Trust - the world’s largest independent charity funding research in medicine and pharmacology - precious historical documents on medicine together with contemporary and classical Japanese art explore a fascinating union that continues from times long gone through to futuristic explorations such as in biotechnology. This unique exhibition finds connections between the mortal human life and the eternity of art.

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    Old Flea & Music Alley @ Peranakan Museum
    Place: Peranakan Museum - Singapore, 39 Armenian Street, Singapore
    Date: Dec 05, 09
    Detail: As part of Explore Singapore! 2009, the Peranakan Museum is hosting a full day of culture, shopping and music for the hip and trendy! Besides entering the world of Peranakan culture and soaking in the glamorous lifestyles of the Babas and Nonyas at the Baba Bling! Showcase, shopaholics can go crazy at the flea market specially set up to bring good bargains for everyone. Music lovers are also promised a good time of music at the nearby Timbre with local band Soulfellas, Jack & Rai and West End Boulevard performing their latest numbers. With free beer and pizza coupons, what are you waiting for? Come and join us for a good time!

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    Old The Botanical Party – A special concert of Bird songs, and the Trees of the World Light-Up
    Place: Singapore Botanic Gardens, Shaw Foundation Symphony Stage, Palm Valley - Singapore, 1 Cluny Road, Singapore
    Date: Dec 05, 09
    Detail: Time: 6.30pm. Admission is free!

    The Singapore Botanic Gardens will conclude the celebration of its 150th Anniversary with a spectacular and fun-filled Botanical Party to be held at the Shaw Foundation Symphony Stage and Palm Valley of the Singapore Botanic Garden on Saturday, 5 December 2009 from 6.30pm. This special Botanical party consists of a unique concert of bird songs, and the lighting of 150 trees in a themed “Trees of the World” Light-Up. Admission to this event is free and it’s open to all.

    Birdsongs

    Treat your ears to an enchanting melody of songs, as modern classical composer Robert Casteels leads a group of Singapore’s finest jazzmen, world-music performers and the Philharmonic Youth Winds to perform a unique concert of bird songs. Enjoy the lush flora and fauna surroundings of the Botanic Gardens as the performers serenate you with jazz classics, Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square and Lullaby of Birdland, while familiar tunes such as Jimi Hendrix’s Little Wings, The Beatles’ Blackbird and Maurice Ravel’s Three Beautiful Birds from Paradise are re-interpreted and re-harmonised specially for this concert.

    Trees of the World Light-Up

    Witness a visual spectacle as the Botanic Gardens gets lighted up via 150 specially decorated trees in the Botanic Garden’s Trees of the World light-up. The trees, specially decorated by embassies, schools and community groups, will provide a unique atmosphere to the Gardens in conjunction with the festive season.

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    Old Opening Exhibition: Ceramics - Fun and Functional
    Place: Nezu Museum - Tokyo, 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Jan 09, 10 to Feb 28, 10
    Detail: One of the eight exhibitions at the museum to celebrate the reopening of the newly renovated museum.

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    Old Opening Exhibition - Inner Landscapes and the Spirit of Zen Calligraphy
    Place: Nezu Museum - Tokyo, 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Mar 13, 10 to Apr 18, 10
    Detail: One of the eight exhibitions at the museum to celebrate the reopening of the newly renovated museum.

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    Old Opening Exhibition - National Treasures Irises Screens and Rimpa Paintings
    Place: Nezu Museum - Tokyo, 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Apr 24, 10 to May 23, 10
    Detail: One of the eight exhibitions at the museum to celebrate the reopening of the newly renovated museum.

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    Old Opening Exhibition - Noh Masks and Costumes: Tales of Human Sentiment
    Place: Nezu Museum - Tokyo, 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Jun 05, 10 to Jul 04, 10
    Detail: One of the eight exhibitions at the museum to celebrate the reopening of the newly renovated museum.

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    Old Opening Exhibition - Masterpieces of Buddhist Art: Representing the Sublime
    Place: Nezu Museum - Tokyo, 6-5-1 Minami-Aoyama Minato-ku, Japan
    Date: Jul 10, 10 to Aug 08, 10
    Detail: One of the eight exhibitions at the museum to celebrate the reopening of the newly renovated museum.

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    Top | Exhibition Public | Fairs | Exhibition Private | Conference/Symposium | Auctions
    Fairs
    USA & Canada Europe & Africa | Asia

    Old SITE Santa Fe International Biennial - Talking Pictures
    Place: SITE Santa Fe - Santa Fe, 1606 Paseo de Peralta, New Mexico, USA
    Date: Oct 10, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: Site Santa Fe, a contemporary art space in New Mexico, was established in 1995 and with it the first SITE Santa Fe Biennial. For each subsequent biennial SITE Santa Fe has appointed well-known international curators to develop a curatorial theme and select international artists for the exhibition.

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    Old 10th Biennial of Cuenca
    Place: Biennial of Cuenca - Equador, Bolívar 12-60 y Juan Montalvo, Ecuador
    Date: Oct 22, 09 to Dec 04, 09
    Detail: Theme: Intersections: Memory, Reality and New Eras

    The Biennial of Cuenca, Ecuador, continues its consolidation process as a forum open to all expressions of contemporary visual arts with no reservations regarding format or medium. Under this premise the Biennial is taking solid steps toward a renewed cultural policy committed to principles of artistic integration that do not limit themselves to holding imposing exhibitions every two years, but that arrange continuous programs of dissemination of an educational and theoretical nature to sponsor an effective introduction to contemporary artistic manifestations for all segments of the community.
    From this perspective, the Biennial has created the Office of Artistic Management within its internal structure, which will be in charge of articulating all levels in the development of the X Edition, in aspects such as curatorship, museography, theory, education and communication, all with the same conceptual and operational objective.
    Also new is the inclusion in the competition of works from geographical areas outside the American continent. Until the ninth edition the Cuenca Biennial had limited the field of countries to the western hemisphere, whose practices and artistic production constituted the exclusive object of study of the event. In the tenth edition, Europe, Africa and Asia will be present for the first time in the exposition.
    The work of the X Biennial is under way for the competition exhibition to be held from October 22 to December 4 of 2009. It revolves around the basic theoretical pillars that govern this new edition: Institutional Policy, General Postulates, Curatorial Principles and the Conceptual Basis. They are components with links among themselves, since the conceptual proposal – Intersections: Memory, Reality and New Eras – is in agreement with the premises, that “the Biennial should be sensitive to the current era of visual art and cultural in general, maintaining a wide vision in which criteria of quality predominate in the selection of the artists’ proposals,” with “well defined spaces” that endeavor to attain “an essential principle for a good museography… in both conventional and unconventional places.”

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    Old The International Fine Art Fair
    Place: The Park Avenue Armory - New York, Park Avenue at 67th Street, USA
    Date: Apr 30, 10 to May 04, 10
    Detail: Paintings, drawings and sculpture from Renaissance to contemporary by European and American artists. All works are for sale under the strictest vetting conditions.

    Admission: $20 (Tickets available on the door).
    All bags, backpacks and tote bags must be checked.

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    Europe & Africa USA & Canada | Asia

    Old 5th International Artist's Book Triennial Vilnius 2009
    Place: Bokartas, Kestutis Vasiliunas - Vilnius, Filaretu 9 - 5, Lithuania
    Date: Feb 28, 09 to Dec 31, 09
    Detail: Theme: "Text"

    Dates and Venues:
    ----------------------------------------

    28 Feb - 10 Mar 2009, Gallery Kaya, Dhaka, Bangladesh

    20-30 Mar 2009, Bangladesh National Museum, Dhaka, Bangladesh

    12-15 Mar 2009, Leipzig Book Fair, Germany

    30 Apr-16 May 2009, Gallery "Arka", Vilnius, Lithuania

    May 2009, Seoul International Book Arts Fair, Seoul, Korea

    Sep-Dec 2009, Art Centre Silkeborg Bad, Silkeborg, Denmark

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd International Art Exhibition
    Place: La Biennale di Venezia - Ca' Giustinian, Venezia, San Marco, 1364/a, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Theme: Making Worlds

    The 53rd International Art Exhibition, entitled 'Making Worlds', directed by Daniel Birnbaum, organized by La Biennale di Venezia chaired by Paolo Baratta, will open to the public from Sunday June, 7th to Sunday November, 22nd 2009 in the Giardini (50,000 sq.m.) and the Arsenale (38,000 sq.m.) as well as in various other locations around the city. The press preview will take place on June 4th, 5th, and 6th 2009.
    The Director of the 53rd Exhibition, Daniel Birnbaum, has been Rector of the Staedelschule Frankfurt/Main and its Kunsthalle Portikus since 2001. 'Fare Mondi // Making Worlds', presented in the renewed Palazzo delle Esposizioni in the Giardini and in the Arsenale, is a single, large exhibition that articulates different themes woven into one whole. It is not divided into sections. Considering collectives, it comprises works by over 90 artists from all over the world and includes many new works and on-site commissions in all disciplines.
    'The title of the exhibition, "Fare Mondi // Making Worlds"', says Director Daniel Birnbaum, 'expresses my wish to emphasize the process of creation. A work of art represents a vision of the world and if taken seriously it can be seen as a way of making a world. The strength of the vision is not dependent on the kind or complexity of the tools brought into play. Hence all forms of artistic expression are present: installation art, video and film, sculpture, performance, painting and drawing, and a live parade. Taking "worldmaking" as a starting point, also allows the exhibition to highlight the fundamental importance of certain key artists for the creativity of successive generations, just as much as exploring new spaces for art to unfold outside the institutional context and beyond the expectations of the art market. "Fare Mondi // Making Worlds" is an exhibition driven by the aspiration to explore worlds around us as well as worlds ahead. It is about possible new beginnings—this is what I would like to share with the visitors of the Biennale.'
    The National Participations of the 53rd International Art Exhibition, presented in the historical Pavilions in the Giardini, in selected areas of the Arsenale and in numerous venues throughout the city, are this year amounting to the record number of 77 Nations participating, including first-time participations of Montenegro, Principality of Monaco, Republic of Gabon, Union of Comoros, and United Arab Emirates. Furthermore there is a record number of 38 Collateral Events, proposed by international organizations and institutions, which will organize their own exhibitions and initiatives in Venice during the occasion.

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    Old Biennale de Lyon
    Place: Lyon Biennial of Contemporary Art - Lyon Cedex, 3 rue du Président Edouard Herriot, France
    Date: Sep 16, 09 to Jan 03, 10
    Detail: Theme: The Spectacle of the Everyday

    This edition celebrates the 10th anniversary under the direction of international curator, Hou Hanru, Director of Exhibitions and Public Programs at the San Francisco Art Institute and artistic director Thierry Raspail. Hou Hanru has chosen the theme ‘The Spectacle of the Everyday’ which comprises the work of a select, key group of international artists, both established and emerging alike. Artists from Asia include Bani Abidi from Pakistan; Shilpa Gupta from India; Takahiro Iwasaki, Tsuyoshi Ozawa and Michael Lin from Japan; Kuswidananto aka Jompet and Eko Nugroho from Indonesia; Lee Mingwei, Lin Yilin, Li Qingyuan & Yah, Tsang Kinwah, Chen Shaoxiong, Huang Yongping, Yang Jiechang and Yangjiang Group (Zheng Guogu, Chen Zaiyan, Sun Qinglin) from China; Gimhongsok from Korea; and Wong Hoy Cheong from Malaysia.
    The event also includes the Veduta, an art event taking place in the periphery of Lyon curated by Abdelkader Damani. Veduta's aim is to reflect on the centre/periphery dichotomy and the ‘issues’ which can be connected to this. The three chosen artists for the 2009 Veduta project are Bik Van der Pol, Eko Nugroho and Robert Milin.

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    Old PAN Amsterdam
    Place: Amsterdam RAI Parkhal - Amsterdam, Europaplein, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: This event is renowned for its high-quality, international offerings of paintings and sculptures from the 16th century to the present, modern and antique furniture and objects, maps and prints and 20th-century design. It also presents art from diverse cultures: Greek, Roman, Asian and Pre-Columbian art, ethnic art, new Japanese and South Korean painting and African art. The quality of all items on sale is monitored by 18 specialist vetting committees, made up of more than 80 experts. They assess the authenticity, quality and condition of all the objects before the fair opens.
    Exhibitors showing works from Asia include EH Ariens Kappers Oude Prenten / C.J.P. van der Peet Japanese Prints; Hamadi Oriental Art; Pieter Hoogendijk; Hotei Japanese Prints; Kollenburg Antiquairs; Oranda Jin; Polak Works of Art; E. Pranger Oriental Art; Guus Röell; Paul Rutten Asiatic and Tribal Art; Vanderven & Vanderven Oriental Art; and Kunstzalen A. Vecht.

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    Old The European Fine Art Fair (TEFAF Maastricht 2010)
    Place: MECC (Maastricht Exhibition & Congress Centre) - Maastricht, Forum 100, Netherlands
    Date: Mar 12, 10 to Mar 21, 10
    Detail: As a visitor to TEFAF Maastricht you will be present at an outstanding event, one that offers the best choice of the very best in fine art. You will have a unique chance to view and to buy paintings from Bruegel to Bacon as well as objects reflecting 6,000 years of excellence in the applied arts.
    No where else will you find such an elegantly displayed selection of genuine masterpieces from 239 of the world’s most prestigious international dealers.
    No where else will you find such rigorous investigation of their quality, condition and authenticity. Every item is checked by one of 25 vetting committees made up of over 155 internationally respected experts.
    And no where else will you find yourself in such a distinguished and stimulating company of dealers, academics, art critics, and collectors. During the week of the fair, anyone who is anyone in the field of fine art will be at TEFAF Maastricht.

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    Old Olympia International Art & Antiques Fair
    Place: Olympia Exhibition Halls - London, Hammersmith Road, United Kingdom
    Date: Jun 04, 10 to Jun 13, 10
    Detail: Now in its 36th year, the Olympia International Art & Antiques Fair is the essential art and antiques event in London for over 30,000 private buyers, curators, interior designers and devotees from around the world taking place in June 2009.
    Housed in Olympia’s magnificent Grand Hall, the annual June Fair is the largest, and only truly international Fine Art and Antiques Fair in London, offering an unparalleled variety of world class art and antiques for sale.
    Over 260 of the world's most prestigious British and international galleries will exhibit an extraordinary selection of unique pieces, ranging from ancient Chinese ceramics to Art Deco jewellery, 20th century Design Classics, Old Master paintings and a diverse range of furniture from English formal, oak and country to painted and Continental.
    Each object on sale has been carefully vetted by a team of 200 experts.

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    Old The International Ceramics Fair & Seminar
    Place: Mall Galleries - London, 17 Carlton House Terrace, United Kingdom
    Date: Jun 10, 10 to Jun 13, 10
    Detail: The Ceramics Fair is renowned for its mix of dealers, collectors and academics from 13 countries who participate in its seminar program, and for its broad range of European and English antique ceramics and glass, as well as 20th century studio ceramics and glass – all strictly vetted before going on sale. Established 1982.

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    Old The International Ceramics Fair & Seminar
    Place: The Park Lane Hotel - Piccadilly, London, United Kingdom
    Date: Jun 11, 10 to Jun 14, 10
    Detail: The Ceramics Fair is renowned for its mix of dealers, collectors and academics from 13 countries who participate in its seminar program, and for its broad range of European and English antique ceramics and glass, as well as 20th century studio ceramics and glass – all strictly vetted before going on sale. Established 1982.

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    Asia USA & Canada | Europe & Africa

    Old 4th Fukuoka Asian Art Triennale
    Place: Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, 7 & 8th floor, Riverain Center - Fukuoka City, Building, 3-1 Shimokawabata-machi, Hakata-ku, Japan
    Date: Sep 05, 09 to Nov 23, 09
    Detail: The "Fukuoka Asian Art Triennale (Fukuoka Triennale, FT)" is the largest exhibition presented by the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum. The word "triennale" is an Italian word that means "every three years". However it is now commonly used in the art world as a pronoun for an international art exhibition held every three years after the Milan Triennale and the Venice Biennale ("biennale means "every other year") came to be acknowledged as authoritative international contemporary art exhibitions.
    The reason for having such exhibitions every two or three years is to introduce a trend of the most up to date tendency of contemporary art under a specific theme. As these exhibitions gather the latest art trends from different places of the world periodically and continuously, they can reflect and represent contemporaneity and internationality.
    The Fukuoka Triennale sets a different theme for each exhibition focusing on the most remarkable movements in Asian art of a particular time to introduce original creativities of Asia and the original activities of the museum in the context of the history, society and culture of Asia of that time. It is for this reason that the Fukuoka Triennale attracts so much attention.

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    Old Singapore International Art Fair 2009 (SIAF 2009)
    Place: Singapore Expo - Singapore, Singapore
    Date: Nov 27, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: An international art fair where art galleries around the world gather under one roof to showcase their artworks. Artists, art buyers, art supply manufacturers, art academies and related trades from more than fifteen countries will be participating to show paintings, drawings, sculptures and digital art by emerging artist from Southeast Asia.

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    Old Asia-Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art
    Place: Queensland Art Gallery - Brisbane, Gallery of Modern Art, Australia
    Date: Dec 05, 09 to Mar 14, 10
    Detail: The first 3 Asia-Pacific Triennials were all curated in a similar way. The curatorial process involved collaboration between Queensland Art Gallery staff and many local and international researchers/advisors for different regions of the Asia -Pacific. In this way the triennial aimed to show a broad range of artists, in extensive survey shows. The fourth Asia-Pacific triennial departed from this curatorial format. Queensland Art Gallery staff chose a much smaller number of artists, to represent key artistic developments of the Asia-Pacific of the past decade.

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    Old 6th Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art (APT6)
    Place: Queensland Art Gallery / Gallery of Modern Art - Queensland, Stanley Place, South Bank, Australia
    Date: Dec 05, 09 to Apr 05, 10
    Detail: This event will include the work of more than 100 artists from 25 countries, including collaborations and collectives, which reflect the diversity of practices across Asia, the Pacific and Australia. A number of specific focuses and thematic links will consider recent shifts in contemporary art in communities that have not been represented in the APT before, including works by artists from Tibet, North Korea, Turkey and Iran, and from countries of the Mekong region such as Cambodia and Myanmar. APT6 will also acknowledge the innovation that exists in performance and music in Asia and the Pacific. APT6 will consider a number of thematic links, including the dynamism of collaboration, the power of popular culture to articulate perspectives on contemporary life, the impact of rapid social change on local communities and cultures, and the practice of drawing’.
    Exhibiting artists and projects include Alfredo and Isabel Aquilizan, Chen Chieh-jen, Chen Qiulin, Cheo Chai-Hiang, Subhood Gupta, Gonkar Gyatso, Kyungah Ham, Ho Tzu Nyen, Raafat Ishak, Runa Islam, Ayaz Jokhio, Takeshi Kitano, The Mekong (Bui Công Khánh, Jun Nguyen-Hatsushiba, Pich Sopheap, Manit, Sriwanichpoom, Svay Ken, Tun Win Aung and Wah Nu, Vancy Rattana), Kohei Nawa, Shinji Ohmaki, The One Year Drawing Project (Muhanned Cader, Thamotharampillai Shanaathanan; Chandraguptha Thenuwara, Jagath Weerasinghe), Qiu Anxiong, Hiraki Sawa, Shirana Shahbazi, Shooshie Sulaiman, Thukral and Tagra, Charwei Tsai, Yang Shaobin, Yao Jui-chung and Ji Wenyu.

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    Old 17th Biennale of Sydney - 'The Beauty of Distance: Songs of Survival in a Precarious Age'
    Place: Sydney Harbour, including Cockatoo Island, Pier 2/3, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney Opera Ho - Woolloomooloo NSW, 43-51 Cowper Wharf Road, Australia
    Date: May 12, 10 to Aug 01, 10
    Detail: This exhibition, created by David Elliott, will take place against the iconic backdrop of the harbour and Sydney Opera House at the site where British explorers first encountered the local inhabitants. Since 1973, the Biennale of Sydney has showcased international and Australian contemporary art and is one of the most celebrated and respected biennale exhibitions. The 17th Biennale of Sydney will take place in venues and sites around Sydney Harbour, including Cockatoo Island, Pier 2/3, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney Opera House, Royal Botanic Gardens and Artspace.
    The subtitle is inspired by experimental film maker, anthropologist and musicologist Harry Everett Smith whose compilation of historic recordings, Anthology of American Folk Music, appeared in 1952 at the height of the Korean war and Senator McCarthy's political witch hunts in the USA. A program of concerts, performances and events will coincide with the exhibition.
    Elliott remarked: `Smith's offbeat intuition, integrity, unique sense of popular history, and eye and ear for quality provided inspiration and guidance for generations of future musicians, listeners and artists. The breadth of Smith's interests and his commitment to all forms of art – from abstract films, to folk music, blues and Native American dance rituals – are a guiding example I have followed in conceiving this Biennale. I have also tried to reflect his political belief that creativity – and the honesty that it demands – is the liberating birthright of us all.'

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    Top | Exhibition Public | Fairs | Exhibition Private | Conference/Symposium | Auctions
    Exhibition Private
    USA & Canada Europe & Africa | Asia

    Old Fine Asian works of Art
    Place: Sal\'s Antiques - Garden Grove, 13139 Brookhurst St. #D, California, USA
    Date: Feb 14, 08 to Feb 14, 10
    Detail: Specializing in bronze, porcelain and Dealing in fine Asian works of art including Chinese, Korean, Tibetan, and Southeast Asia.

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    Old The Human Dichotomy: Tazeen Qayyum, Attiya Shaukat, Aisha Hussain and Rehana Mangi
    Place: Aicon Gallery - Palo Alto, 535 Bryant Street, California, USA
    Date: Oct 17, 08 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Aicon Gallery, Palo Alto will present a group exhibition of the works of Tazeen Qayyum, Attiya Shaukat, Aisha Hussain, and Rehana Mangi from October 17 through November 29, 2008. This will be the artists' first exhibition with Aicon Gallery.
    Throughout the ages, art has evolved as a medium by which its creators are able to contradict, question, and explore the confounding dichotomies that make humanity so intriguing. Questions of human nature, underlying worth, emotion, and fragility have pervaded artists' thoughts endlessly, and in turn have given way to artwork that challenges its viewers. Four artists have done exactly that with their new exhibition: Tazeen Qayyum, Attiya Shaukat, Aisha Hussain and Rehana Mangi have assimilated their surroundings and experiences to produce work that is, at the very least, an exploration of the human condition, and at the most an avenue for contemplation of one's own nature.
    Tazeen Qayyum explores the intricacies of humanity in a body of work which focuses on the repeated image of a cockroach. The insect serves as a symbol of dehumanization, and the diminished value of human life. The methodic and detached treatment of the cockroach communicates an attitude of homogenization which calls into question how political systems regard their multitudes of constituents. From afar the patterned work is attractive; it is only when the viewer inspects each image closely that they are faced with the unpleasant reality. The contrast between beauty and death is inescapable.
    Attiya Shaukat delves into a far more individual and personal aspect of humanity. The artist's work explores how the human body and mind respond to physical trauma: the voyage from experiencing the trauma itself to the recovery from such an experience. Feelings of pain, fear, bewilderment and resolve are illustrated by two distinctly opposite visuals: the mechanical and the organic. Images of cold and impersonal medical instruments are in sharp contrast with those of the organic and fragile vertebrae, creating a dichotomy between the human and inhuman.
    Aisha Hussain's body of work is a compelling collection of dualities: personal and political, organic and structured, story-telling and somehow illegible. Hussain's script begs to be read, but instead is understood as pattern work, texture, a foundation on which her images and graphics can find a place to sink in and be part of a whole. The form recalls that of a book, yet the content is chaotic and not meant to be "read" in the most logical sense of the word. Hussain's intention is a commentary on any and all dualities; her oeuvre, in turn, is a physical tribute to the contradictions one may come across in all walks of life.
    Rehana Mangi incorporates a very personal facet in her work: human hair, an aspect of the body that is exceptionally representative of life and personality. Mangi's utilization of this medium continuously calls the viewer to recognize the organic and life-infused nature of her medium, but the artist simultaneously applies the human product in gridded, linear, structural ways. There is an apparent rift between life and mechanism, emotion and void, which shows in Mangi's collection. Emotions and humanness give way to an invasive sense of nihility and vacancy.

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    Old Humanism in China: A Contemporary Record of Photography
    Place: China Institute Gallery - New York, USA
    Date: Sep 24, 09 to Dec 13, 09
    Detail: A new exhibition of documentary photography, "Humanism in China: A Contemporary Record of Photography," will be on view at China Institute Gallery from September 24 through December 13, 2009, revealing a glimpse of China never before seen in the U.S. The photographs, dating from 1951 though 2003, offer intimate portraits of rural and urban daily life in China, beyond the glossy veneer of the economic boom. A fully illustrated catalogue will accompany the exhibition.
    Much in the way that "The Family of Man," the 1955 landmark photography exhibition curated by Edward Steichen at The Museum of Modern Art in New York, explored the universality of the human experience, "Humanism in China: A Contemporary Record of Photography" offers rare insight into ordinary and extraordinary human experiences – in this case, taking place in China over the last 50 years.
    "Humanism in China: A Contemporary Record of Photography" was organized by the Guangdong Museum of Art and represents the first large-scale collection of photography acquired permanently by any museum in China. Opening at the Guangdong Museum in 2003, the exhibition has since traveled to seven venues in China, Germany and Scotland. The curators, Wang Huangsheng, An Ge and Hu Wugong, visited photographers’ homes and studios in more than 20 provinces and viewed an estimated 100,000 photographs before selecting 600 images by 248 photographers. The exhibition at China Institute Gallery will offer a more tightly focused selection – 100 photographs by more than 80 photographers – chosen by Dr. Jerome Silbergeld, Professor of Chinese Art History at Princeton University.
    Together the images present an unvarnished, starkly realistic view of the hardships and rewards of social modernization.

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    Old Eastern Departures: Ceramics From Eastern Japan
    Place: Joan B. Mirviss Ltd. - New York, 39 East 78th Street, 4th Floor, USA
    Date: Nov 11, 09 to Dec 18, 09
    Detail: Joan B. Mirviss Ltd will present the work of several seminal modern and contemporary Japanese potters working from the Eastern regions of Japan. Through history, attention on traditional Japanese clay has been predominated by ceramics of Western Japan, as represented by works from potters' studios throughout the Kyoto, Hagi, Bizen, Kanazawa and Arita regions. It is only in the 20th century that ceramics have taken hold in Eastern Japan; this has given these contemporary ceramicists a far greater independence and artistic freedom than their counterparts in the tradition-bound West. Our exhibition focuses on artists who best represent this new tradition and will include works by National Treasures Hamada Shoji, Matsui Kosei and Shimaoka Tatsuzo, and contemporary masters Ito Tadashi, Kawase Shinobu, Ogata Kamio, Ono Kotaro, Sakiyama Takayuki, and Wada Morihiro.

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    Old Asian Artist, Joo Han in New York Exhibition
    Place: Agora Gallery - New York, 530 West 25th St, New York, USA
    Date: Nov 19, 09 to Dec 11, 09
    Detail: Reception: Thursday, December 03, 2009, 6:00 - 8:00 p.m.
    Gallery Hours: Tues – Sat, 11a.m. - 6 p.m.

    Chelsea’s Agora Gallery will feature Korean artist, Joo Han, in Metamorphosis. The exhibition is scheduled to run from November 20, 2009 through December 11, 2009 (opening reception: Thursday, December 3, 2009).
    Joo Han’s examination of daily existence allows her to take an objective stance on the psychological meaning behind everyday occurrences. She seeks to portray the emotional truth behind the tensions, humor and happiness that makes up the ritual of human life. Influenced greatly by Korean traditional folk painting, her abstract depictions are abundant with vibrant colors. Feelings of tolerance, concentration, indifference, hate, and generosity commonly reside within the images that she paints from her imagination. Han’s favorite technique is to use complementary colors to create sarcastic objects.
    Upon witnessing her grandfather’s death during her childhood, Han was inspired to look at death as nothing but a change in the shape and status of life. Such an event has greatly influenced her artwork. She strives to depict how everything alive around us has its own invisible spirit, which moves between different times and spaces. Joo Han has a BFA and MFA from Seoul National University and MA from Purdue University.
    Pulsing with a vibrant energy, Agora Gallery’s The Rhythm of Color displays the expressive central role that an artist’s palette plays in the creation of a painting. Crafting their personal inspirations in a variety of styles, this exhibition features a collection of painters that are united in their understanding of the intimate relationship between color and emotion. Persistence of Form daringly explores the experience of our modern world through the eyes of the artist. Beautifully crafted imagery abounds in this choice selection of paintings as the artists inject wit, fantasy, and sensitivity into their vision of humanity. The works are raw and physical, daring to examine inwardly while holding an unadulterated mirror to the world to expose both the ills and the joys to be found. Color of Transformation is a wonderfully diverse grouping of contemporary painters working at the forefront of their medium. With an adept eye for form, the featured artists swathe their imagery in wonderfully rich colors to maximize both visual and emotional reactions. With influences ranging from music to the natural world, visitors will enjoy exploring and interpreting the messages so brilliantly expressed through the power of color. Exhibiting a wide range of contemporary art, Metamorphosis dives into a vast cauldron of fiery inspiration. We see the humanness behind the form, we find joys, fears, intrigue, and power. There is an expanse of inventive styles, as elemental forms and dynamic figures transform the desire for understanding into action, in the same manner of the early explorers. To make the unknown, known: to see what lies over that horizon.

    Featured Artists:

    The Rhythm of Color- Renata Cebular, Ciceros, Álvaro Cuartango, Patrick Girod, Anduin Vaid, Melissa G. Watt
    Persistence of Form- Sher Christopher, Meredith Collins, Jim Lively, Coco Masuda, John Nieman, Vera Puig, Annie Seddon, Sibylle
    Color of Transformation- Mats Andersson, István Csizmadia, Sunil Howlader, Kristo (Christian Nicolas), Doug Simon
    Metamorphosis- Fabrizio Andriani, Chritch, Emin Guliyev, Joo Han, Michael Indorato, Marcela, Brian Reed, Marina Reiter, Jane Sandes

    About Agora Gallery:

    Agora Gallery is a fine art gallery located in the heart of New York City’s Chelsea art galleries district that was established in 1984 and is famous for showcasing a spectacular array of talented artists from around the world and around the corner, while providing quality and original art to collectors. The gallery also publishes ARTisSpectrum Magazine, a bi-annual magazine that is distributed to museums, galleries, art institutions and art schools around the world. It provides artists, collectors, museums, galleries, art organizations and enthusiasts with access to the work of internationally talented emerging and mid-level artists as well as feature articles, reviews and interviews. Agora Gallery is also the sponsor of Art-Mine.com, one of the most comprehensive resources available worldwide to view and purchase fine art from emerging, mid-level and well-established artists. Most recently, the gallery launched http://agoraartgalleryblog.com, a blog designed to provide helpful information and advice for artists while providing a forum for artists to help one another by sharing their experiences and thoughts.

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    Old Mirage Landscapes: Paintings by Fareen Butt
    Place: Crossing Art Gallery - Queens, 136-17 39th Avenue, Ground Floor, New York, USA
    Date: Dec 03, 09 to Jan 24, 10
    Detail: Press preview: Thursday December 3, 2009 3 pm
    Opening Reception: Sunday December 6, 2009 2 – 5 PM

    Crossing Art is pleased to announce the opening of Mirage Landscapes: Paintings by Fareen Butt. The Mirage Series is a collection of metaphysical landscapes inspired by the spiritual and mystical concepts of Jerrahi and Ishraqi Sufism, as well as Buddhism. The works explore the perceptions of truth and enlightenment unique to each human being. The rich textures that engulf the artist's large canvases are created through a unique process of combining the Japanese painting technique of Nihonga with Pointillism.
    Fareen Butt fuses eastern and western methodologies that are reflected in her painting process where she combines Southeast Asian methods and classical European fine art. The two methods used in the Mirage Series are Nihonga, which includes the process of using precious and semi-precious stones as pigment, and Pointillism, a method made famous by Seurat in the 1800s and more recently by Pousette-Dart. Butt harmoniously merges Nihonga with Pointillism to create the complex colors and textures of her works. Her hybrid technique also lends itself to that of the meditative through the time and discipline it takes to cover the vast amounts of surface in such a feverous but controlled style.
    The Mirage Bamboo Series is based on photographs taken of serene forest landscapes in China and the Himalayas. The inspiration of the natural is translated onto the canvas with stones such as ruby, diamond and sapphire, derived from the artist's native region of the Himalayas. It is the birthplace of the Buddha, the place where he meditated over mysteries, and sought enlightenment. The paintings produce a meditative effect on the viewer as he or she steps from the painting to watch the disconnected “points” of color merge to form vibrant landscapes. Butt perceives the landscapes to be visions of “places rendered sacred by many: the earthly manifestation of the pervasive cosmological landscape; the earthly manifestation of the Universal consciousness in the form of the Human collective consciousness.” Expressed through these “moving” points of color amidst the solid, stagnant sections of stone, she explains that the works “pursue the vital energy embodied, ebbing, in these spaces amidst the roots of omnipresence. It is a representation of the landscape as a fertile spiritual Mecca, in its entirety.”
    Fareen Butt is a Pakistani painter who lives and works in New York. She received her BA from The New School in New York and is a PhD candidate for University of London, Goldsmith College. Butt has future exhibitions planned for Canada, Beirut, Qatar, Oman, Paris, Berlin, New York, Dubai, Dhaka and India.
    The exhibition Mirage Landscapes visually presents a dialogue between humanity’s historical desire for a concise cosmogony and the perpetual pursuit of enlightenment.

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    Europe & Africa USA & Canada | Asia

    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: Create & Change: Internal = External, 1 = ∞
    Place: Palazzo Pisani Santa Marina - Venice, Cannaregio 6104 (Calle delle Erbe), Italy
    Date: Jun 04, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: The exhibition by the Taiwanese artist Lee Sun-Don, curated by Achille Bonito Oliva, is a working progress which will extend for the whole exhibition period while the artist performs his impromptu paintings. The exhibition shows and shares an unprecedented creative path through Buddhist achievements in order to spread universal harmony through the cosmic energy generated by the artist’s performance and the viewer’s contemplation.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: AttaKim: ON-AIR
    Place: Palazzo Zenobio - Venice, Dorsoduro 2596 (Fondamenta del Soccorso), Italy
    Date: Jun 04, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Palazzo Zenobio will host 'AttaKim: ON-AIR' by Korean artist Atta Kim. Atta Kim is a philosopher and a man of thought rather than an artist. He developed a unique view of the world through his own exceptional training for a long time. His photographs of cities capture the dichotomous natures of space, matter and time, hinting at a twilight reality into which everything will fade. Kim also shows a way in which photography can be used as a conceptual/abstract form.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Life of Imitation: Singapore Pavilion
    Place: Palazzo Michiel del Brusa - Venice, Cannaregio, Italy
    Date: Jun 04, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Ming Wong will represent Singapore at the 53rd Venice Biennale International Art Exhibition this year.
    A graduate of the Slade School of Art (UK) and the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (Singapore), Wong is presently based in Berlin, Germany, where he undertook a one year artist residency at the prestigious Kunstlerhaus Bethanien in 2008. Wong has made significant in-roads internationally with his participation in numerous group and solo visual arts exhibitions in Europe, North America and Asia; notable recent showcases include the Images Festival in Toronto Canada, Vain Efforts in Sydney Australia, S1 Salon in UK and the Jakarta Biennale. Wong’s works are currently on display at the At Home Abroad showcase at 8Q SAM, for Singapore artists who are well received overseas.
    This will be Singapore’s 5th consecutive presentation at the Venice Biennale. The Commissioner for the Singapore Pavilion is Lim Chwee Seng, Director of Visual Arts & Resource Development, National Arts Council (NAC), while Tang Fu Kuen, an authority in managing multi-disciplinary arts showcases, serves as curator.
    The Singapore Pavilion, entitled 'Life of Imitation', stages the co-existence of multiple worlds where language, gender, appearance and traditions constantly negotiate with one another. In playful and imperfect acts of mimesis and melodrama, this exhibition attempts to hold the mirror up to the Singaporean condition related to roots, hybridity and change.
    Wong explores the performative veneers of language and identity through his own re-interpretations of “world cinema” – he has created a series of multi-channel video installations inspired by classic cinematic moments from Hollywood, Europe, China and South East Asia. The mood is further enhanced by billboards painted by Wong and Singapore’s last surviving billboard painter Neo Chon Teck, and movie memorabilia such as photographs of old cinemas in Singapore, paintings, drawings and transcripts, depicting the creation process of Wong’s video installations and the entire exhibition itself.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: Divergence: Exhibits from Macao: Macau Pavilion
    Place: Infopoint Arte Communications - Venice, Riva S. Biagio, Castello 2145, Italy
    Date: Jun 06, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Space In Flux (by Bonnie Leong Mou Cheng/Kitty Leong Mou Kit), EA Airways Limited (by João Ó Bruno Soares) and Timeless Tunnel (by Lee Yee Kee) were the three porposed artworks selected to be featured in the 53rd Venice Biennale.

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    Old Gonkar Gyatso at the 53rd Venice Biennale
    Place: La Biennale di Venezia - Venezia, Italy
    Date: Jun 06, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Gonkar Gyatso, who is represented by Rossi and Rossi of London, has been invited to participate in the 2009 Venice Biennale.
    In his letter to the artist, the Director wrote: `In my view your work will be one of the central contributions to the exhibition and perfectly fits the theme of my show Fare Mondi / Making Worlds....'. The Rossis state that it is a great honour and timely recognition for Gonkar, who co-curated with them the landmark exhibition `From Classic to Contemporary: Visions from Tibet' in 2005. Since then the work of contemporary Tibetan artists has gained international.
    Born in Lhasa in 1961, Gonkar studied fine art at the Central Arts Academy in Bejing and at Central Saint Martins and the Chelsea School of Design in London. His work is held in the Newark Museum, USA, the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford, the Queensland Art Gallery, Brisbane, the White Rabbit Collection, Chippendale, the Burger Collection, Switzerland and Hong Kong, the Devi Foundation, India and the Crocker Art Museum, California, as well as in several major private collections in Europe, Australia, Asia and the US.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: Making (Perfect) World: Harbour, Hong Kong, Alienated Cities and Dreams: Hong Kong Pavilion
    Place: Arsenale, Campo della Tana - Venice, Castello 2126-30122, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: 'Making (Perfect) World: Harbour, Hong Kong, Alienated Cities and Dreams', a solo presentation of Hong Kong artist Pak Sheung Chuen at the 53rd Venice Biennale, will feature a series of newly commissioned site-specific works that are conceived and produced for the site and context of Venice and the Biennale. In addition to this, a selection of Pak's past works will also be presented, bringing together a comprehensive illustration of his oeuvre. The exhibition is curated by Tobias Berger in association with Para/Site Art Space, and marks the debut for a solo representation of Hong Kong in Venice.
    Pak's interest lies in the possibilities of discovering extraordinarily profound and insightful messages encoded within the most unlikely and ordinary places. He draws elements from everyday life and its surroundings in order to rediscover 'meanings' that are often missed or even ignored by most people. In realising his witty and poetic ideas and thoughts through self-reflective and philosophical gestures, Pak goes beyond meditating on the legitimisation of his seemingly random acts as contemporary art, to successfully blur the boundaries between the personal and the political. Defying aspects of physicality and spirituality, Pak enables new ways of reinterpreting unwritten codes and complexities that exist within contemporary societies.
    Influenced by the politics and identity of post-1997 Hong Kong as well as the tradition of Performance Art, Pak's distinctive methodology towards 'adaptation' consists of inserting himself as the subject into the equation, adopting this position to question and explore the notion of individual identities against the new globalised societies and realities that are of extreme relevance to the ongoing modernisation of Asia's mega cities.
    'Making (Perfect) World' will be conceptually divided into four segments - Harbour, Hong Kong, Alienated Cities and Dreams, and it will include a mixture of sculpture, photography, documentation of performances and texts from the artist's intriguing yet humorous body of work --- an exercise in constructing a humane, sensitive and thoughtful alternative to approaching and experiencing everyday life. Pak endeavours to encapsulate both hopes and losses in his ongoing quest for a better understanding of our, at times, confusing and imperfect world.
    The exhibition is organised by The Hong Kong Arts Development Council and curated by Tobias Berger in association with Para/Site Art Space. Supported by The Burger Collection, Vitamin Creative Space and Osage Art Foundation.
    Pak Sheung Chuen was born 1977 in Fujian (China) and immigrated to Hong Kong in 1984, where he currently lives and works. Awarded the Overseas Exchange Prize (Chinese Performance Art) by the Macao Museum of Art and the Lee Hysan Foundation Fellowship by the Asian Cultural Council in 2005 and 2006 respectively. Pak has participated in numerous international exhibitions, including The First Stop on the Super Highway at the Nam June Paik Art Center in Korea (2009), The 3rd Yokohama Triennial (2008), The 3rd Guangzhou Triennial (2008), Power Station: Part 2 at Astrup Fearrnley Museum in Oslo (2007) and The 6th Busan Biennale (2006). His solo exhibition Page 22 is permanently installed in New York's 58th Street Branch Library.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Windswept Women: The Old Girls’Troupe: Japan Pavilion
    Place: Giardini di Castello, Arsenale - Venice, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Miwa Yanagi plans an installation titled “Windswept Women: The Old Girls’Troupe” to be shown at the Japan Pavilion in the 2009 Venice Biennale.
    With a black, membrane-like tent, the Takamasa Yoshizaka-designed Japan Pavilion will be transformed into a space of contemporary time representing the fluidity and mobility of "death." Before long, the old young women that are familiar characters in Yanagi's work will, like visitors from another world, appear in Venice. But when they do, they will reassume their huge, life-sized forms, which until that point had been kept under wraps, and completely cover our small "lives" as observers. Enclosed in huge frames, the photographs that the women inhabit are nothing less than life-sized images of "death" as it is. The "death" within these women, which should be small, is a transposed world that emerges when one recalls their actual size. They disappear at the moment one becomes aware of this transposition as Yanagi tries to reassemble this theatre, which has once again begun to wander, in Venice.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Condensation: Haegue Yang: Korea Pavilion
    Place: National Pavilion, Giardini di Castello - Venice, Arts Council Korea, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Haegue Yang was selected to represent Korea in the Korean Pavilion for the 53rd Venice Biennale.
    Haegue Yang works primarily in sculpture, video, and installation. Her practice is engaged with history, human sentiment, lived experience, and memory. Yang's work seeks an emotional relationship to the audience predicated on a kind of vulnerability offered by the artist that in turn relies upon the participation and subjectivity of the viewer. In her video essay, Squandering Negative Spaces (2006), Yang expresses her position through a narrator: "There is a silence, then a vulnerable silence that has a story to it. It is like this, for example: any song that strikes a chord in our heart causes us to worry about its ending. A state where one dares not to listen to a song because of the fear of its ending is a silence, but it is a different kind of silence. I am looking for the state of the vulnerability that includes this very potential sound."
    Yang's work is often described as "poetic,"though that perhaps simplifies her investigations. In fact, Yang's work is subtle, contemplative. In her light sculptures and installations, Yang utilizes the invisible source of electricity, made tangible by artificial sources of light, scent, heat, air, and sound, as a metaphor for the potential connections between people and ideas, and across time and history. Because she is engaged with subjectivity and resonance, Yang frequently seeks to extend or expand a particular experience through time.
    "Haegue Yang is a compelling artist whose work speaks to a complex struggle for context through the stimulation of human senses and the experience of the viewer. The project for the Biennale is a great opportunity for us to continue our ongoing conversation in the form of an international exhibition that echoes the artist's preoccupations with Europe and Asia," says Eungie Joo. Haegue Yang received her B.F.A. from Seoul National University, Fine Arts College in 1994, and her Meisterschüler from Städelschule Frankfurt am Main, Germany, in 1999. Her works have been exhibited internationally including Anyang Public Art Project 2007; BAK, basis voor actuele kunst, Utrecht; the 55th Carnegie International, Pittsburgh; Cubitt Gallery, London; Kunsthalle Hamburg; Portikus, Frankfurt; REDCAT, Los Angeles; 2006 Sao Paulo Biennial; the 2008 Turin Triennale; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and most recently, Sala Rekalde, Bilbao. Yang lives and works in Berlin, and Seoul.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: Library
    Place: Gervasuti Foundation - Venice, Via Garibaldi, Castello 994 (Fondamenta Sant’Anna), Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: The installation of the Korean artist Woojung Chun presents an imagined library with bookshelves, desks and other familiar devices - recognizable as symbols of secured and organized knowledge. Where seemingly all knowledge resides, the artist reveals the image of a library as a place of persistent search for elusive questions: unsolved theories, unexplained narratives and unresolved philosophical debates.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: East-West Divan: Contemporary Art from Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan
    Place: Scuola Grande della Misericordia - Cannaregio, Venice, Fondamenta della Misericordia 3519/A, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: The exhibition will present recent works by ten artists from three countries, better known in the West for stereotypes of terrorism and Islamic extremism than for their rich artistic heritage and vibrant contemporary cultures.
    'East-West Divan' meditates upon links between the artistic traditions in Venice and the Persian artistic heritage shared by these countries, revealing the tightly knotted relationship between East and West - both in life and the imagination.

    Participating artists include: Khadim Ali, Shezad Dawood, Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Khosrow Hassanzadeh, Bahman Jalali, Aisha Khalid, Imran Qureshi, Nusra Latif Qureshi, Zolaykha Sherzad, Farzana Wahidy

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Disorient: Dutch Pavilion
    Place: Giardini di Castello, Arsenale - Venice, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Amsterdam-based film and video artist Fiona Tan represents the Netherlands at the 53rd International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia with a new audio-visual installation entitled 'Disorient'.
    Fiona Tan (b. 1966) is interested in the cultural role of the camera, whether film or still, and how its images trigger our imagination. Images of people almost always play a central role in her photographs, films and audio-video installations, and she places great emphasis on how images "affect and inform the internal picture we have of ourselves, of others and of the world around us."
    The role of language and the written word is equally fundamental to her work, and Tan personally scripts the texts and essays that accompany her films. Many of her works are defined by a back and forth shifting between visual and literal possibilities of meaning. For Tan, the audiovisual story is simultaneously one and many.
    At the Dutch Pavilion, the artist will present 'Disorient' (2009), a new video installation that draws on the city's medieval influence before the discovery of new routes to Asia diminished its power. Tan's fascination with time, history, and memory led her to explore the biography of Marco Polo, who left home at the age of seventeen and traveled extensively for the next twenty-five years. Whereas in Tan's earlier pieces, the search for identity is a psychological journey, in Venice the approach is focusing on how people relate to the city's cultural history. "I am interested in the juxtaposition of word and image, in conflicting relationships between the two and…in the slippages of truth or truths in the many versions of historical accounts."
    Two other recent works will also be on view in Venice, works which were chosen to complement and enhance the overall installation by the way they are situated in the architecture. For 'Provenance' (2008), Tan researched 17th-century, "Golden Age" portrait paintings in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam and responded by making six contemporary video portraits of modern Amsterdammers. In 'Rise and Fall' (2009), images of water—turbulent, churning as well as slow-moving and placid—are focused on as a metaphor for how memory is formed.
    Fiona Tan was born in Indonesia and grew up in Australia. In 1988 she moved to the Netherlands to pursue studies at the Rietveld Academie and the Rijksakademie. Her work has been exhibited widely in numerous international exhibitions and institutions including Documenta 11 (Kassel), Yokohama Triennale (Japan), Lunds Konsthall (Sweden), Pinakothek der Moderne (Munich), Tate Modern (London) and the New Museum (New York). The artist lives and works in Amsterdam, where she teaches at De Ateliers.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Collateral Event: Foreign Affairs: Artists from Taiwan: Taiwan Pavilion
    Place: Palazzo delle Prigioni - Venice, Castello 4209, San Marco, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Hsieh Ying-chun, Chen Chieh-jen, Chang Chien-chi and Yu Cheng-ta have been chosen to represent Taiwan at the 53rd Venice Biennale scheduled to take place from 7 June to 22 November 2009. The exhibition entitled 'Foreign Affairs' explores the current state of the individual in the imbalanced unsymmetrical circumstances of globalization, presenting personal, informal projects and practical applications of "actual foreign affairs".
    'Foreign Affairs' presents the process and technique of constant construction and affirmation of identity, deploying a shifting relationship between others and oneself. The construction of the subject is a constant flux of exchanging and addressing with others. Whether with individuals, groups, communities, or nations, the establishment of a relationship must depend on communication and interaction. Particularly Taiwanese people have been locked in a difficult political conundrum in terms of foreign affairs, and have developed their own means of reaction and response, both individually and collectively.
    The selection of works explores the practical state of cross-regional art in the context of the operative logic of contemporary global politics, economics and society; alternative possibilities for communicative interaction; and also the question of Taiwan's status and identity. The participating artists, according to their own identities, enter into other regions, with their unique personal modes of practical application – to observe, document, and intervene - in order to interact and collide, with that area of the world, concretely putting a system of foreign affairs into action.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - Gondola al Paradiso Co., Ltd: Thai Pavilion
    Place: 566 Santa Croce - Venice, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: 'Gondola al Paradiso Co.,Ltd.' is a thematic presentation from the Thai Pavilion at the 53rd Venice Biennale, a flawless art project transformed into a travel agency. A camouflaged art by 5 Thai artists imitates the myth in current society through diverse medium. The pavilion does not only present the site-specific exhibition and physical art object but also concretely twine the social, cultural and economic contexts together in order to interact with social perception.

    The strength of the exhibition is that five artists’ uniqueness and conceptual ideas are combined together and, simultaneously, does not fail to express their individual characters. At the same time, the artwork itself arouses us to question our thoughts and believes towards our surroundings and contemporary society; whether what we see is reality, deception or illusion. Consequently, 'Gondola al Paradiso Co., Ltd.' does not only introduce the theme of "Reconstruction" in order to awake the society from the myth of information, but it also works as an aesthetic expression of the current context at the specific moment in time.

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    Old Venice Biennale 53rd - What is Coming: China Pavilion
    Place: Arsenale and Vergini Gardens - Venice, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: To See a World in a Grain of Sand (Jian Wei Zhi Zhu)

    Exhibiting artists include Fang Lijun, He Jinwei, He Sen, Liu Ding, Qiu Zhijie, Zeng Fanzhi and Zeng Hao. Internationally renowned Chinese artist Lu Hao, an important representative of post-1999 contemporary Chinese art, has curated the exhibition. As an associate professor at the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, he was able to take into consideration multiple perspectives in the selection process and in the laying out of the exhibition strategies; international and local, and those of the artistic and academic communities. Focusing on emerging artists from the region, the exhibition seeks to strengthen new forces burgeoning on the contemporary Chinese art scene and to retain its international scope and vision without deviating from the latest trends emerging in the Chinese art world. The theme and title comes from the translation of a Chinese idiom derived from the classic text by scholar and philosopher, Han Fei Zi·Shuo Lin Shang, signifying that trends in the future can be gleaned from the development from a tiny detail. The articles are not only cultural reformers of contemporary Chinese society, but also participants in the evolution of contemporary Chinese art. Their works encompass shifts taking place in China, and highlight ultra individualism, originality and pluralism.

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    Old Making Worlds // Fare Mondi // Bantin Duniyan // Making Worlds // Weltenmachen // Construire des Mondes // Fazer Mundos at the 53rd Venice Biennale
    Place: La Biennale di Venezia - Venice, Italy
    Date: Jun 07, 09 to Nov 22, 09
    Detail: Artist Sunil Gawde presents ‘Alliteration’ a large (4,5 meters) kinetic black metal kinetic sculpture at the Venice Biennale. Its front side presents a screen-like surface to viewers, a wall on which circular cuts representing 28 moons turn at variable speeds, dipping in and out of view. The reverse side is open, naked to the eye, without hood or baffle: a candid disclosure of the mechanism composed by seven belt-driven wheels, which are choreographing with their movements an elaborate dance of the moons. The sculpture is a complex meditation on the passage of time. It alludes directly to a cosmos calibrated by the interlocking trajectories of suns, moons and planets. The consistent rotation of the multiple moons evokes time but simultaneously provokes us to ponder on the notions of periodicity and duration. When undivided, time has no concrete beginning or end until we begin to domesticate it within markers and pollute it with numbers, creating units and fractions that provide us a sense of duration. Left alone without a sense of frequency, time is an endless journey without stations where the only definite reality is the present. It also emerged out of a playful transliteration of some Indian religious symbols. Shiva the destroyer or transformer god, is wearing a permanently crescent moon as an ornament, that makes him an eternal reality beyond cycles of time symbolized by the waxing and waning of the moon. With understated eloquence, it reflects on a society that has made the transition from an industrial past to a future in which the machine is a splendid ruin rather than engine of profit, quiescent memorial to fortune rather than turbulent generator of change.

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    Old Conflicting Tales - Inaugural Exhibition of the Burger Collection
    Place: Zimmerstrasse - Berlin, 90-91, D-10117, Germany
    Date: Sep 05, 09 to Dec 13, 09
    Detail: Scenes of conflict and antagonism, scenes of disagreement and discord are motifs for the opening exhibition of the Burger Collection. With this premise, 'Conflicting Tales' engages with subjectivity, not an interior view, but an engagement with the field of tension that opens between the individual and society. Consciousness is posited as a problematic: how does the individual deal with societal ideas, rules, and models? Through what decisions does the individual arrive at the position that he or she ultimately takes vis-A-vis the others? When and why is the individual absorbed in society, and when does he or she resist the social outside? Selected works by more than 30 contemporary artists of the Burger Collection generate an environment in which these questions can be raised in an exemplary fashion. In so doing, art is not subjected to sociology, but becomes meaningful to the extent that it allows us to observe how subjectivity is formed, influenced, challenged, and perhaps generated within aesthetic processes or phenomena. This is grounded by the premise that aesthetic experience is particularly important wherever moral, political, or historical forces shape and form the site of subjectivity in ways that can only be traced out with difficulty.
    A starting point for the exhibition 'Conflicting Tales' is the unstable and at the same time highly vital threshold between youth and adulthood, a point in life where social identity develops in difficult or at least interesting ways, also a point in time where more constant forms of physical and intellectual consciousness take shape. Antagonistic possibilities and attitudes of expectation mix with the problem of identity. One of the questions here is the role of the ego, whereby the staging of our own body in relation to the social surrounding and society as a whole is especially important. If this first question can be described as “what to do with our own body,” then the second question is rather, “How to set my body in relationship to society?”
    With this, our attention shifts from the psychological and physical aspects toward symbolic and intellectual aspects that have an effect in this process and that remain of general importance beyond this threshold for individual biographies. It is now the environment, or rather, the political and historical dynamic of society that comes into view, in the form of codes, protocols, and contexts of knowledge, but also as a confusing reservoir of movements and impulses. But how does this have an impact upon the emergence of or change in subjectivity? The artists explore this realm by raising questions of communication that emerge between individuals and the media, political, and historical contexts, questions that are sometimes left incomplete, as an unsolvable contradiction, or in fact fail.
    'Conflicting Tales' is the first of four planned exhibitions from the holdings of the Burger Collection, which currently includes around 1000 works, that will focus generally on the issue of subjectivity. Three further exhibitions in coming years will probe the issues of narration, historicity, and language as they play out in the Burger Collection. The concept for the presentation of the Burger Collection foresees changing sites of presentation around the world for the exhibitions. The purpose of these temporary exhibitions is an open engagement with the collection concept, in which various models of exhibition, presentation, and outreach are investigated.

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    Old Imperial Court Carpets from the Qing Dynasty
    Place: Danon Gallery - Paris, 38, Rue de Bellechasse, France
    Date: Sep 11, 09 to Nov 28, 09
    Detail: An exhibition featuring in particular works from the beginning of the Qianlong reign until that of the last emperor, Xuantong. Carpets produced at the imperial studios bore traditional motifs such as dragons, phoenixes and flowers. In more highly prized pieces, gold, silver and copper - metals to which therapeutic properties were attributed - were inserted into the silk warp and weft, as in a carpet with a ‘white lotus’ motif. Designs often reflected a diagram of the cosmological scheme of the five elements, as represented by animal or botanical images.

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    Old Ai Weiwei: So Sorry
    Place: Haus der Kunst - Munich, Prinzregentenstrasse 1, Germany
    Date: Oct 11, 09 to Jan 10, 10
    Detail: Ai Weiwei is regarded as the most important contemporary Chinese artist. His project ‘fairytale’, a crowd-puller at the 2007 Documenta in Kassel, brought Ai international fame: for ‘fairytale’ he had 1001 Chinese flown in; it was the largest project that has ever been created for the Documenta. For his artworks Ai initially appropriates objects – such as thousand-year-old Chinese antiquities or spiritual artifacts – in order to then transform them; he thereby rids them of their original meaning and places them into new contexts. Ai’s works pointedly pose the question of how old and new can coexist, what the new qualities of tradition might look like and how China behaves with regard to itself. To Ai Weiwei the Haus der Kunst represents an important place for reflection because of its complex and difficult past: Ai strongly criticises China’s political leadership and demands an end to censorship analysing the conditions in which authoritarian regimes and cultural dictatorships exist. Ai Weiwei occupies almost the entire building, including its façade, with own artifacts and performative installations that refer to the past, present and future of China.

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    Old Untitled Identity : Tsewang Tashi Solo Show and Masterpieces of Himalayan Art
    Place: Rossi & Rossi - Mayfair, London, 16 Clifford Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 29, 09 to Nov 26, 09
    Detail: Untitled Identity, an exhibition of new works by the Tibetan artist Tsewang Tashi, will be held by Rossi & Rossi in the gallery Mayfair, London from Thursday 29 October to Thursday 26 November 2009. This is part of a series of solo exhibitions devoted to the work of contemporary Tibetan artists over the past two years.
    Tsewang Tashi is a founding member of the Gedun Choephel Artists’ Guild in Lhasa, a group of artists, all born in the turbulent 1960s and ‘70s, who came together in 2003 through shared experiences and common interests. Their work combines a desire to be part of a vibrant contemporary art scene while continuing to respect and value the traditional aspects of Tibet’s unique cultural heritage. Tashi uses his physical environment, real people and contemporary life, as a source of inspiration. He avoids incorporating elements in his work that would perpetuate the myth of Tibet as Shangri-La and believes that contemporary art cannot be created when contemporary life is ignored.
    Untitled Identity will be accompanied by a catalogue containing an essay by Kabir Mansingh Heimsath, a doctoral candidate in Anthropology at the University of Oxford who has been studying and working in Lhasa on various projects since 1996. He writes: “Tsewang Tashi’s career defies any preconception of Tibetans isolated on account of mountains, faith or politics. Somewhere within the matrix of his administration, teaching and research, Tsewang finds the space to create shimmering portraits of young Tibetans – photographed, computerized, processed and painted onto massive canvases – potent with stillness.” Fifteen of these haunting works will be offered by Rossi & Rossi for prices ranging from $5,000 to $15,000.

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    Old Seven Classical Chinese Paintings
    Place: Eskenazi Ltd - London, 10 Clifford Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 29, 09 to Nov 27, 09
    Detail: Seven rare Chinese paintings will be offered by Eskenazi, one of the world’s leading dealers in Chinese works of art, at 10 Clifford Street, London, from Thursday 29 October to Friday 27 November 2009 to coincide with the 12th staging of Asian Art in London, 29 October to 7 November. The unparalleled expertise on Asian art to be found in London is demonstrated during this annual event when top dealers, auction houses, museums and institutions present exhibitions, auctions, lectures and gallery talks that attract visitors from around the world.
    Giuseppe Eskenazi has always had a personal interest in this rarified aspect of Chinese art and acquired the seven paintings over a period of 25 years. This is the first time they have been shown in public by the gallery, which is more associated with other aspects of Chinese art such as bronzes, sculpture and imperial porcelain. The paintings range in date from the 12th to the 15th centuries, and all but one, which is on paper, are painted on silk. The quality of the silk is indicated by the tightness of the weave and reflects the status of the artist and his patron. Such delicate works of art are rare survivals and do not often appear on the market. The finest collection in the world is in the National Palace Museum in Taiwan.
    The Chinese particularly prized painting and calligraphy for its intellectual, documentary and poetic content. All but one of the present paintings bear seals of artists or collectors. Of the seven works, five are album leaves, one is a fan painting, and one is a handscroll. Unlike most Western paintings, they would not have been on permanent display but examined and admired in private, perhaps with a particular friend or on some auspicious occasion.

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    Old Important Chinese paintings and calligraphy and Chinese works of art; Japanese netsuke, lacquer and works of art
    Place: Sydney L. Moss Ltd - Mayfair, London, 12 Queen Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 29, 09 to Nov 27, 09
    Detail: Speciality: Chinese and Japanese paintings and calligraphy; Chinese literati works of art, Japanese netsuke and lacquer, Indian, Southeast Asian and Himalayan sculpture.

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    Old Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art
    Place: Nicholas Pitcher Oriental Art Ltd - London, 1st Floor (above Halcyon Gallery), 29 New Bond Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 29, 09 to Nov 27, 09
    Detail: Speciality: Early Chinese pottery and bronzes from the Warring states to the Song dynasty. Also stocked are later Chinese works of art and porcelain.

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    Old Recent Acquisitions
    Place: A&J Speelman Ltd - London, 129 Mount Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 29, 09 to Nov 27, 09
    Detail: Speciality: Rare Chinese, Japanese and Himalayan works of art, including Tang pottery and Chinese export ceramics, Buddhist images and ritual objects.

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    Old Chinese Snuff Bottles from Private Collections, Jades and Works of Art
    Place: Robert Kleiner & Co Ltd - London, 30 Old Bond Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 29, 09 to Nov 30, 09
    Detail: Speciality: Chinese porcelain, snuff bottles, jades and works of art.

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    Old Beyond China: The New Painting from Taiwan
    Place: Michael Goedhuis Gallery - London, 16 Bloomfield Terrace, United Kingdom
    Date: Oct 30, 09 to Nov 27, 09
    Detail: An exhibition of ten contemporary artists from Taiwan, all of whom represent New Ink Painting - the contemporary expression of the classical brush and ink style developed over the centuries. Highlighted are some of the most significant work being done by the most distinguished practitioners and ranging from the neo-classical to the avant-garde. The artists include the internationally established Liu Kuo-sung, Tong Yangtze, Yuan Jai, Lo Ch'ing, Yu Peng, and Ho Huai-shuo to the emerging younger generation of brilliant exponants such as Fay Ku, Pan Hsin-hua, Yao Jui-Chung, and Chun-yi Lee. Each with their own distinct style, these artists represent different trends in the development of contemporary Chinese ink painting.

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    Old Sculptures, works of art, ceramics and glass, Impressionist and Modern paintings
    Place: Kunstzalen A. Vecht, Stand N°: 43 - Amsterdam, Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 40, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: We are broadly orientated, but our emphasis lies on European and Asian sculpture and works of art, ceramics and glass and impressionist and modern art.
    We strive for a high quality. Therefore we have dealt with private collectors, as well as with museums all over the world.

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    Old Oriental and Asian art
    Place: Vanderven & Vanderven Oriental Art, Stand N°: 5 - Hertogenbosch, Nachtegaalslaantje 1, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Vanderven & Vanderven Oriental Art, specialises in Asian art with an emphasis on Chinese and Japanese export porcelain. Also included are early bronzes and terracotta objects dating from as early as 3000 BC as well as Chinese works of art and colonial furniture. The firm has sold to numerous private collectors, decorators, museums and historic houses in the world.
    Every sale should be a festive occasion, where the client should feel happy with the object and the sale process. We aim to provide all the academic information with our object in a written report. We also offer a door to door delivery service. The client therefore buys with full confidence and utmost convenience.
    The business is run from offices in an historical building in the centre of the medieval town of ‘s-Hertogenbosch. Visitors are welcome on Friday or by appointment or they can see the collection on our stand at one of the fairs in which we participate.

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    Old Art from Nepal, Tibet, Africa and Southeast Asia
    Place: Paul Rutten Asiatic & Tribal Art, Stand N°: 44 - Amsterdam, Keizersgracht 574, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Art from Nepal, Tibet, Africa and Southeast Asia

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    Old Furniture, works of art and paintings
    Place: Guus Röell Fine Art & Antiques, Stand N°: 142 - Maastricht, Tongersestraat 2, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Specializes in Furniture, works of art and paintings for the western markets out of the trading posts of the former Dutch East Indian Compagny, the VOC.
    18th century town house in the centre of Maastricht with 10 differently 17th to 19th century decorated rooms. Open by appointment.

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    Old Oriental Art
    Place: E. Pranger Oriental Art, Stand N°: 63 - Amsterdam, Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 53, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Edward Pranger Oriental Art specializes in antique Chinese and Japanese ceramics and works of art. You will also find court-and fat-ladies, and ceramic funerary sculptures.
    Ancient bronze ritual vessels, and inlaid bronze works of art such as objects for personal adornment, are a key part of this important collection of Asian antiques.
    And Japanese art forms such as netsuke, lacquer, inro, tsuba and sagemono are prominently represented. These pieces are invariably made from organic materials such as lacquer, ivory, wood, rhinoceros horn, soapstone and hardstones.
    Tibetan and Thai Buddhist sculpture, displayed on 18th and 19th century Chinese furniture, can frequently be viewed in the spacious gallery.

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    Old Archaeology, Asiatic art, Earthenware, Glass, Furniture, Porcelain, Sculptures
    Place: Polak Works of Art, Stand N°: 70 - Amsterdam, Spiegelgracht 3, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Polak Works of Art is an antiques and art store the likes of which are few and far between nowadays. The store unequivocally belongs to the higher quality segment. The items are of immaculate quality and represent a wide array of cultures and periods. From a French medieval Madonna and a gothic two-panel painting to a Buddha statue to a pearl inlaid ornamented bow from the Solomon Islands. The collection also houses a selection of colourful Indian paintings, ethnographics, Roman bronze works, Chinese glass, Dutch silver, remarkable antique furniture and modern jewellery.

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    Old Japanese paintings and painters’ ceramics
    Place: Oranda Jin, Stand N°: 78 - 's-Hertogenbosch, Jon de Jong, Marleen van Rheden, Kalverstraat 28, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Oranda Jin (Dutchman in Japanese) was founded in 1987 by Jon de Jong. Oranda Jin sells original Japanese scroll paintings, fan paintings, drawings, painting albums and even pottery decorated by painters.
    In stock are antique paintings of good quality from important Japanese painting schools like Shijo-Maruyama, Nanga, Nihonga and Zen. In the first week of each month Oranda Jin's website gallery presents a new selection. If you don't find there what you're looking for, please contact us. There is a lot more.
    Oranda Jin is settled in 's-Hertogenbosch, the Netherlands. You are welcome to make an appointment to visit us.

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    Old Algemeen antiquair
    Place: Kollenburg Antiquairs BV, Stand N°: 61 - Oirschot, Postbus 171, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: With a broad client base, mainly in North Western Europe, Kollenburg Antiquairs endeavours to show the absolute top quality in antique furniture and objets d’art originating of the Low Countries.

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    Old Japanese prints, paintings, Japanese illustrated books, Japanese Art Deco
    Place: Hotei Japanese Prints, Stand N°: 65 - Leiden, Rapenburg 19, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Hotei Japanese Prints always has several hundred Japanese prints in stock, as well as c.80 scroll paintings, a small selection of illustrated books and a growing number of objects ranging from ceramics by artists such as Hamada Shoji and Shimaoka Tatsuzō, bronze vases and objects by Nakajima Yasumi, early 20th century lacquer, mizusashi (water containers) and cloisonné.

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    Old 18th century furniture, objets d´art
    Place: Pieter Hoogendijk, Stand N°: 155 - Naarden, Amsterdamsestraatweg 31, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Specialising in 18th century furniture from the Northern European countries, with a preference for European and Japanese furniture decorated with lacquer, as well as veneered and marquetry pieces from France and the Netherlands. The collection also embraces select paintings from the 17th until 19th centuries, and different decorative arts including European and Oriental porcelain, Delftware, silver and tapestries. In other words a generalist.
    The in-house furniture restoration studio offers special services to clients.

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    Old Chinese, Oriental ceramics and fine Asian works of Art
    Place: Hamadi Oriental Art, Stand N°: 134 - Hattem, Kerkhofstraat 3, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Our current stock covers various types of Chinese porcelain including blue and white, monochromes, blanc de chine, famille verte and famille rose. Our gallery is located in an old pittoresque town of Hattem in the Netherlands.

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    Old Japanese woodblock prints from the 18th - 20th century Ukiyo-e
    Place: E.H. Ariëns Kappers Oude Prenten / C.J.P. van der Peet Japanese Prints, Stand N°: 60 - Amsterdam, Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 32, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: In November, we will participate at the Arts Fair PAN in Amsterdam, and issue a small catalogue of about 20 new prints.

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    Old Pars Oriental Carpets
    Place: Foumani Persian Gallery, Stand N°: 74 - Amsterdam, Beethovenstraat 107a, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: We are very proud to be able to say that Foumani has become a concept in the international market and that people value our knowledge and judgement about new and antique hand-made carpets. Having so much experience, we can offer truly exclusive and antique carpets to our customers with one whole year exchange warranty and ten years quality guarantee. Up to now, our goal has been to better promote this exclusive art form. That is why we wanted to open a gallery in Amsterdam, one of best known cultural cities in Europe.
    We realised our wishes on April 5th 2003, when Foumani Persian Gallery opened. Considering the geographical position of Amsterdam, we will be able to get in touch with international customers as well as our beloved Dutch customers.

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    Old Aziatica, Ethnografica en Netsukes
    Place: Algemeene Ethnografica en Kunsthandel Aalderink, Stand N°: 80 - Amsterdam, Spiegelgracht 15, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Algemene Ethnografica- en Kunsthandel Aalderink BV is a dealer of Asiatic art, Ethnographic art, Pre-Columbian art in Amsterdam, Netherlands.

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    Old Chinese porcelain from the 15th to the 19th centuries
    Place: Luis Alegria, Stand N°: 50 - Porto, Av. Dr. Antunes Guimaraes, Portugal
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Founded in 1981, Luis Alegria specialises in eighteenth and nineteenth century marine paintings, seventeenth and eighteenth century furniture, seventeenth, eighteenth and nineteenth century Portuguese tiles and Chinese porcelain from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries.

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    Old Dutch Delftware, Oriental art and Continental furniture
    Place: Aronson Antiquairs, Stand N°: 4 - Amsterdam, Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 39, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Aronson Antiquairs is now in its fifth generation. Robert Aronson runs this prestigious gallery on the Nieuwe Spiegelstraat which was founded in 1881.
    In the gallery you will find some of the earliest objects made by the Delft factories in the 17th century, and a superb collection of polychrome animals, figures, plaques and chargers from the 18th century.
    Also to be found is Continental furniture from both the 17th and 18th century. Treat yourself to a visit to Aronson Antiquairs whenever you are in Amsterdam.

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    Old Contemporary Art from Asia, Latin America and Australia/New Zealand
    Place: Canvas International Art, Stand N°: 125 - Amsterdam, Gerard Doustraat 142-144, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: CANVAS INTERNATIONAL ART founded in 1995 by Joris Escher and Martijn Kielstra, presents and promotes the work of young contemporary artists from Asia, Latin America and Australia. Canvas organises exhibitions either in its own gallery, or in conjunction with museums or other art institutions. Besides a gallery Canvas runs an art rental for companies and regularly publishes books about the work of the artists.
    CANVAS WORKS with artists whose ideas, concepts or thoughts are relevant to us. The artists live in major cities in Latin America, Asia and Australia and are mostlu under 45. They often move in international circles and make contemporary art. You won't find traditional, ethnic or craft pieces in Canvas. Canvas is not limited to certain techniques or mediums. The artists produce paintings, graphic art, drawings, photography, video installations, digital prints, sound.

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    Old Indian and Oriental Antique Jewellery, South Sea Baroque Pearls
    Place: Van Gelder Indian Jewellery, Baroque Pearls, Stand N°: 71 - s-Hertogenbosch, Oude Dieze 15, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: The prime specialisation of Van Gelder is antique Indian Moghul style jewellery. The collection consists of jewellery set with a large variety of fine gems, pearls and decorated with different enamel techniques. A second field well represented by Van Gelder are South Sea Baroque Pearls of exceptional size and quality. The pearls are drilled at our own workshop where they are fitted at the client´s individual requirements.
    Together with the participation in different high quality national and international fine art and antiques fairs, there is the possibility to view the collection by appointment.

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    Old Asian Contemporary Art
    Place: Willem Kerseboom Modern & Contemporary Art, Stand N°: 122 - Amsterdam, Leidsegracht 38-40, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Willem Kerseboom Gallery is Gallery for Modern & Contemporary art since 1990 - specialising in Chinese Contemporary art.

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    Old Books, Antiquarian and Asian art
    Place: Meijering Art Books, Stand N°: 146 - Dreumel, Rooijsestraat 11, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: By appointment.

    Meijering Art Books, is an antiquarian book company, specialised in books on Asian art. Chinese and Japanese art are the main subjects. We cater to international Asian museums, dealers and collectors. Meijering Art Books, sells via internet, art fairs and the gallery in the south of Holland.

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    Old Oriental Rugs and Textiles, Antique and Design
    Place: N. Vrouyr, Stand N°: 22 - Antwerpen, Komedieplaats 4, Belgium
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: N.Vrouyr has a very wide choice in antique, semi-antique and modern design rugs.

    Iran (antique and modern)
    Turkey (antique and modern)
    Afghanistan (antique and modern)
    Armenia (antique and modern)
    India (antique)
    Nepal (modern)
    Tibet (antique)
    China (antique)
    Caucasus (antique)
    High Atlas (antique)

    The selection of large sized rugs is overwhelming (starting from 12m² up to 30m² and more). Textiles and ethnographical items such as horse covers, tent bands, saddlebags, suzani embroideries etc. are also richly represented.
    We also buy old carpets or take goods in consignment.
    The rugs can be presented at your home, without any commitment.

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    Old 19th and 20th century sculpture, paintings, furniture and works of art
    Place: Wijermars Fine Art, Stand N°: 90 - De Wijk, Dorpsstraat 10, Netherlands
    Date: Nov 22, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Wijermars Antiquairs was founded in 1974 by Gerard Wijermars Fine Art was established in 1974 by Gerard Wijermars as a general antiques business and he was later joined by his wife Netteke and his son Joan. From the very beginning personal taste and the tendency for quality have determined the contents of the collection. Predominantly dealing in French and Dutch furniture, paintings and Oriental ceramics the family business established itself as one of Europe’s major dealers participating in many international fairs among which TEFAF Maastricht. In the nineties they started to deal in sculpture. This new direction proved not only successful but very inspiring as well. The family's predilection for sculpture resulted in a steady grow of the number of sculptures in the collection. Now Wijermars Fine Art is one of the world’s leading dealers in 19th and early 20th century sculpture.

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    Asia USA & Canada | Europe & Africa

    Old Emergentism ll : A group exhibition by French artist Frank Vigneron and Chinese artist Liu Deng
    Place: Edge Gallery - Causeway Bay, G/F 60C, Leighton Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Sep 25, 09 to Nov 28, 09
    Detail: Showing the best selections of gallery artists Liu Deng and Frank Vigneron’s new works.

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    Old Imprinted Thoughts - Chang Fee Ming
    Place: Singapore Tyler Print Institute - Singapore, 41 Robertson Quay, Singapore
    Date: Nov 04, 09 to Nov 24, 09
    Detail: Malaysian artist Chang Fee Ming met the challenges of printmaking at STPI with bravura to produce 51 new works that capture the physical and spiritual strength of inhabitants from his coastal hometown, Terengganu to the rugged terrain of Tibet. Chang seeks to trace cultural, ethnic and historical links of communities where religion and spirituality play an important role. The printmaking medium posed an exciting artistic outlet in Chang’s experimentation with different techniques. He devised effects to invoke peculiar moods and textures of people and places he met on his trips and he pays close attention to textural details of their skin or textiles in rich intense colours.

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    Old Tomita Natsumi - Artist-in-Residency & Solo Exhibition
    Place: iPRECIATION, The Fullerton Hotel - Singapore, 1 Fullerton Square #01-08, Singapore
    Date: Nov 12, 09 to Dec 05, 09
    Detail: Tomita has created a new resolution, aptly titled artistic conservation. Having grown up in the world’s foremost industrialized capital of Tokyo, this artist has, with recycled materials, assembled constituents of various objects into beautiful, amusing creatures that share eccentric semblances with their real-life counterparts. Tomita’s creations are a bridge to promote environmental awareness, relaying the infinite capacity of art to expose and educate.

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    Old What Goes Up….
    Place: Shalini Ganendra Fine Art - Kuala Lumpur, The Private Gallery, Malaysia
    Date: Nov 23, 09 to Dec 30, 09
    Detail: An exhibition of works by four established and award winning Malaysian artists: Yeoh Kean Thai, Lileng Wong, Zac Lee and Shia Yih Yiing in different media centered around the meaning of this phrase.

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    Old Artist in Residence: Do-Ho Suh (Korea)
    Place: Singapore Tyler Print Institute - Singapore, 41 Robertson Quay, Singapore
    Date: Dec 01, 09 to Dec 23, 09
    Detail: Recognized for his intricate sculptures that defy conventional notions of scale and site-specificity, Suh’s work draws attention to the ways viewers occupy and inhabit public space. His sculptures continually question the identity of the individual in today’s increasingly transnational, global society.

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    Top | Exhibition Public | Fairs | Exhibition Private | Conference/Symposium | Auctions
    Conference/Symposium
    USA & Canada Europe & Africa | Asia

    Old Sacred Arts of Asia
    Place: Freer & Sackler Galleries, Smithsonian Institution - Washington, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 707, District of Columbia, USA
    Date: Nov 27, 09
    Detail: Time: 1 pm

    Examine works of art originally created for worship in various Asian religious traditions. Learn how visual characteristics of these art forms reflect key principles and practices associated with each religion.

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    Old Arts of China
    Place: Freer & Sackler Galleries, Smithsonian Institution - Washington, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 707, District of Columbia, USA
    Date: Nov 28, 09
    Detail: Time: 1 pm

    Chinese art has flourished from the Neolithic period into the twenty-first century. Discover the richness and diversity of Chinese art, from ceramics, lacquerware, painting, and calligraphy to ancient bronzes and jades.

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    Old Look Again—Asian Buddhas
    Place: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Carson Family Hall, Uris Center for Education, ground floor - New York, 1000 Fifth Avenue, USA
    Date: Nov 29, 09
    Detail: 11:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m.

    Topics unlocking the history, meaning, and cross-cultural connections of works of art in the Museum are explored through conversation and sketching by visitors ages five through twelve and their adult companions. From time to time, performances enhance this Museum adventure.

    Free with Museum admission.

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    Old The Collectors: Asian Art Objects in Western Collections from 79 A.D. to San Francisco Today
    Place: Society for Asian Art, Asian Art Museum - San Francisco, 200 Larkin Street, California, USA
    Date: Dec 03, 09
    Detail: Time: 3:00 pm – 4:00 pm (new time)
    Place: Education Studio
    Fee: $5 after Museum admission
    Note: Registration required.

    Lecture with Lauren Arnold

    Asian art objects have fascinated collectors for millennia. One of the prized items excavated at Pompeii is a tiny ivory Laksmi figure from India. Art historian Lauren Arnold will introduce us to the collectors and take us on a tour through some unusual collections: Viking tombs; medieval treasure chambers; a princely Renaissance studio; Enlightenment “cabinets of curiosities”- the wunderkammers; up to the present day in our own city, where art from Asia has been preserved, protected, and treasured over time.
    Many collectors will be introduced, but in particular, Lauren will focus on two Italian collectors of Chinese porcelain: Isabelle d’Este and Grand Duke Francesco 1 d’Medici. Isabella, who married at the age of sixteen into the powerful Gonzaga family of Ferrara in the 1490’s, was a voracious collector of all things rare and beautiful, but she had a particular personal interest in Asian ceramics they were widely believed to be resistant to poison and secret potions. Francesco, son of Duke Cosimo 1, was also a collector of the rare porcelains from Asia, but with a decidedly more practical interest. He encouraged the growth of the pottery industry in Tuscany, hoping to produce something rivaling the delicacy and artistry of their Asian counterparts. His venture did not particularly succeed nor did it last past his death in 1587, but it illustrates the lasting interest by Europeans in Asian objets.
    Lauren Arnold is an independent art historian. Her degrees are in history and art history from the University of Michigan. She is a Research Associate with the Ricci Institute at USF, and her field of interest is East-West relations, particularly in early exchanges of art. She wrote Princely Gifts and Papal Treasures: The Franciscan Mission to China and Its Influence on the Art of the West 1250-1350.

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    Old Namban Art and the Jesuit Missions in Japan
    Place: Society for Asian Art, Asian Art Museum, Samsung Hall - San Francisco, 200 Larkin Street, California, USA
    Date: Dec 04, 09
    Detail: Time: 10:30 am – 12:30 pm
    Fee: $125 SAA and AAM members
    $200 non-members (includes AAM membership)
    $20 per lecture drop-in

    Lecture by: Laura Allen, Independent Scholar

    The Society for Asian Art's renowned Arts of Asia lecture series, now in its 45th year, will focus on Trade Roads and Sea Routes in the fall of 2009. Many of our favorite lecturers from past seasons as well as some wonderful scholars we have not heard before will make presentations. You will be transported from courts to caravans, from stupas to shipwrecks, from mountain passes and river valleys to open seas. Travel with merchants and monks, monarchs and missionaries and see their riches and relics.
    Discover ancient ceramics, sculptures, coins, calligraphy, tea wares, textiles and much more.

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    Old Part Animal, Part Cup: Drinking Vessels from Ancient Iran
    Place: Freer Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Meyer Auditorium - Washington, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 707, District of Columbia, USA
    Date: Dec 05, 09
    Detail: Time: 2 pm

    Luxurious gold and silver vessels played an important role in Persian court life during the Achaemenid period (550–330 bce). The elaborate and enigmatic rhyton combined a horn-shaped vessel with the foreparts of an animal or monster, through whose pierced mouth or chest liquid spouted.
    Dr. Susanne Ebbinghaus, the George M.A. Hanfmann Curator of Ancient Art, Harvard University Museum, and Lecturer on the Classics, Harvard University, discusses the spread of this complex drinking vessel as well as other prestigious gift items among elites in the Persian empire and beyond, from the Mediterranean in the west and to Central Asia and China in the east.

    Dr. Ebbinghaus speaks on Persepolis: Royal City of Ancient Persia at Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C., on Thursday, December 3.

    For more information, visit www.doaks.org.

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    Old The Influence of the Korean Peninsula on the Development of Art during the Asuka and Hakuho Periods in Japan
    Place: Society for Asian Art, Asian Art Museum, Samsung Hall - San Francisco, 200 Larkin Street, California, USA
    Date: Dec 11, 09
    Detail: Time: 10:30 am – 12:30 pm
    Fee: $125 SAA and AAM members; $200 non-members (includes AAM membership)
    $20 per lecture drop-in.

    Lecture by: Donald F. McCallum, UCLA

    The Society for Asian Art's renowned Arts of Asia lecture series, now in its 45th year, will focus on Trade Roads and Sea Routes in the fall of 2009. Many of our favorite lecturers from past seasons as well as some wonderful scholars we have not heard before will make presentations. You will be transported from courts to caravans, from stupas to shipwrecks, from mountain passes and river valleys to open seas. Travel with merchants and monks, monarchs and missionaries and see their riches and relics.
    Discover ancient ceramics, sculptures, coins, calligraphy, tea wares, textiles and much more.

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    Old Literary Reading: The Life of a Burmese, by Khet Mar
    Place: Asian Art Museum, Samsung Hall - San Francisco, 200 Larkin Street (between Fulton and McAllister Streets), California, USA
    Date: Dec 13, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 2:00 pm - 3:00 pm

    Khet Mar is a journalist, novelist, short story writer, poet, and essayist from Burma. She started writing short stories in 1989, while Burma was going through political turmoil. Most of her short stories are related to the lives and struggles of Burmese people.
    She is active in feminist, environmental, and educational programs. In 2008, when Cyclone Nagis hit Burma, she established a group of volunteers for relief efforts and led them in supporting cyclone victims in delta region of Burma. Her group visited the delta 40 times and covered about 50 villages in nine townships. She is a co-founder of Green Heart Environmental Network, which was founded with several writers, poets, designers, and journalists. Members of this Network have mounted several exhibitions around saving the environment.
    Author of the novel Wild Snowy Night, as well as several collections of short stories, essays, and poems, her work has been translated into English and Japanese, featured on radio broadcasts, and made into a film.
    During the fall of 2007, she was a visiting fellow at the International Writing Program at the University of Iowa. She is currently a writer–in –residence at the City of Asylum/Pittsburgh.

    This program is co-sponsored with the Center for the Art of Translation.

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    Old Community Speakers Program Talk: Emerald Cities
    Place: Asian Art Museum - San Francisco, 200 Larkin Street (between Fulton and McAllister Streets), California, USA
    Date: Dec 27, 09
    Detail: Time: 2:30 pm - 3:15 pm

    Join one of our docent presenters for a illustrated talk about the special exhibition, Emerald Cities. Free with museum admission. Seating is limited and on a first come, first served basis.

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    Old Conference: Cultural Crossings: China and Beyond in the Medieval Period
    Place: University of Virginia Art Museum - Charlottesville, Thomas H. Bayly Building,155 Rugby Road, Virginia, USA
    Date: Mar 11, 10 to Mar 13, 10
    Detail: 11 March 5:30 pm

    Keynote Lecture: `Crossing a Boundary: Where, When, How’ - Lewis Lancaster, UC Berkeley, Emeritus; Director, Electronic Cultural Atlas Initiative


    12 March

    Opening remarks 8:30 am

    Session I: `Silk Road Studies’ 8:45–10:45 am

    Chair: Bruce Holsinger, University of Virginia

    `The Sogdian Experience in China: Assimilation or Hybridization?’ - Albert Dien, Stanford University, Emeritus

    `Islamic Silver for Carolingian Reforms and the Buddha of Helgö: Rethinking Carolingian Connections with the East, 790–820’ - Eric Ramirez-Weaver, University of Virginia

    `Images of Sun and Moon Gods at Dunhuang between the Sixth and Tenth Centuries’ - Zhang Yuanlin, Dunhuang Academy, China

    `From Hellenistic Scientific Device to Islamic Astrolabe: An Episode of Transmission of a Non-Chinese Scientific Instrument in Late Medieval China’ - Kam Wing Fung, University of Hong Kong

    `Chinese Filial Cannibalism: A Silk Road Import?’ - Keith Knapp, The Citadel

    Discussant: David Summers, University of Virginia


    Session II: `Gender and Medieval China’ 11:00 am–12:45 pm

    Chair: Joan Piggot, University of Southern California

    `Our Woman in Central Asia: Women Diplomats of the Han Court’ - Anne Kinney, University of Virginia

    `Ominous Dress: Hufu (Barbarian Clothing) during the Tang Dynasty (619–907)’- Suzanne Cahill, UC San Diego

    `Wu Zhao and the Mother of Laozi Norman’ - Harry Rothschild, University of North Florida

    `Punishing the Unfilial: A Study of Tang and Song Legal Codes and Anecdotal Writing’ - Ellen Zhang, University of Virginia

    Discussant: Albert Dien, Stanford University


    Session III: `Exchanges with Japan and Korea’ 2:00–4:00 pm

    Chair: Paul Groner, University of Virginia

    `Models for the Heian Capital: Links between Japanese and Chinese Courtly Cultures’ - Joan Piggot, University of Southern California

    `What Five Chinese Portraits Do for Early Heian Japan’ - Ryuichi Abe, Harvard University

    `The Silla Envoy Poems in the Kaifûsô’ - Mack Horton, UC Berkeley

    `What Is in a Place Name? Chinese Poetic Places on the Map of Early Japanese Literature’ - Wiebke Denecke, Barnard College

    `Abe no Nakamaro at the End of the Silk Road’ - Gustav Heldt, University of Virginia

    Discussant: Jonathan Chaves, George Washington University



    Session IV: `New Buddhist Communities in Asia’, 4:15–6:30 pm

    Chair: Karen Lang, University of Virginia

    `How Buddhism Came to China’ - Victor Mair, University of Pennsylvania

    `Buddhism and the Maritime Silk Road’ - Tansen Sen, Baruch College

    `A Preliminary Study of Exchange in Buddhist Art between Medieval China and Southern India and `Southeast Asia’ - Yumin Lee, National Palace Museum, Taipei

    `Giving Movement: Devotional Networks at Bao Shan’ - Wendi Adamek, Barnard College

    `The Exchange of Letters between Zhili and Genshin’ - Paul Groner, University of Virginia

    Discussant: Susan Whitfield, British Library


    13 March

    Session V: `Image, Ritual, and Text in Esoteric Buddhism’ 8:30–10:15 am

    Chair: Kurtis Schaeffer, University of Virginia

    `Dhâranî Pillars in China: Function and Symbol’ - Liying Kuo, École Française d’Extrême-Orient, Paris

    `“Whosoever Writes This Dhâranî…”: The Ritual Use of Dhâranî Lecterns in Medieval East Asia’ - Neil Schmid, North Carolina State University

    `Development and Transformation in Chinese Buddhist Iconography: The Case of the Demon-General Shensha’ - Henrik Sørensen, independent scholar, Denmark

    `Daoist Elements in Esoteric Buddhist Texts of the Tang Dynasty’ - Clarke Hudson, University of Virginia

    Discussant: Victor Mair, University of Pennsylvania



    Session VI: `The Cult of Avalokiteúvara’ 10:30–12:15

    Chair: Suzanne Cahill, UC San Diego

    `Interstices of Compassion: Bodhisattva Avalokiteúvara in China, Central Asia, and India from the Fifth to the Sixth Century’- Denise Leidy, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

    `Avalokiteshvara Images at Candi Borobudur’ - Takashi Koezuka, Osaka University

    `Pilgrimage and the Expanding Territory of Kannon’ - Sherry Fowler, University of Kansas

    `Continued Engagements: Further Thoughts on the Significance of Compassion’ - Janice Leoshko, University of Texas, Austin

    Discussant: Henrik Sørensen, independent scholar, Denmark



    Concluding Remarks and Discussion 12:15–1 pm

    Nicola Di Cosmo, Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton


    13 March

    Digital Workshop on Asian Art and Humanities (hosted by the Institute of Advanced Technology in Humanities), 2:00–5:00 pm

    Chair and moderators: Daniel Pitti and Worthy Martin, Co-Directors, IATH

    Presentations:

    `Mapping the Silk Road’ - Susan Whitfield, International Dunhuang Project, British Library

    `Silk Road: The Path of Transmission of Avalokiteúvara’ - Dorothy Wong, University of Virginia

    `Digital Archive of Buddhist Rubbings’ - Grace Yen, Academia Sinica, Taipei

    `Visualizing and Querying the Biographies of Eminent Monks’ - Marcus Bingenheimer, Dharma Drum Buddhist College, Taipei

    `Mapping the Dalai Lamas’ - Kurtis Schaeffer, University of Virginia

    `Creating a Digital Edition’ - Christian Wittern, Kyoto University

    Roundtable Discussion

    Chair: David Germano, University of Virginia

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    Europe & Africa USA & Canada | Asia

    Old The Reel
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Nov 26, 09
    Detail: Lecture by Shireen Pasha, followed by canapé reception
    Part of the Pakistan Now Connecting Cultures Series, presented by Asia House and Ylva Tasser

    Time ~ 6:45 PM - 7:45 PM (Doors 6.30pm)

    This event illustrates the decade by decade evolution of Pakistan’s film industry post partition, supported by film clips from a range of feature and documentary works. Shireen Pasha is an award winning filmmaker who, after dedicating almost three decades to her work, is now grooming the next generation of Pakistani filmmakers as the head of the Film and Television department of the National College of Art in Lahore. A selection of Shireen Pasha’s documentary films, such as Sacred Spaces of the Indus, will be screened in the Asia House Hutchison Whampoa Room.

    Tickets £13, Asia House Friends & Concs £7

    Special Ticket Offer: The Reel event plus the screening of Khua Kay Liye £18, Asia House Friends & Concs £9

    For booking please call 020 7307 5454 or email

    Tickets for this and other Asia House events now available online

    Online booking closes 24hrs before all events.
    Bookings are neither refundable nor transferable.

    With special thanks to: The High Commission of Pakistan, London
    Mumtaz Hasan Khan.

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    Old Sufi Verse: The Early Mystics to Rumi Reading & discussion with Mahmood Jamal
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Dec 01, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 6:45 PM - 7:45 PM (Doors 6.30pm)

    Poetry has been the most powerful vehicle for conveying Sufi ideas, from the early flowering of Mystical Islam in Baghdad to the later heights that it reached through Jalaluddin Rumi (d.1273) and Jami (d.1492) in Turkey and Iran. Even to this day, these poems and verses are on the lips of Muslims in many parts of the world, regularly sung in sama and qawwali gatherings in India, Pakistan and around the globe. Mahmood Jamal considers the contribution made by Sufi poets to Islamic humanism and to world culture and civilization, and reads a beautiful selection of verse from the 8th to the 20th centuries CE.

    Mahmood Jamal is a poet and author.

    Tickets £10, Asia House Friends and concessions £5

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    Old A King in Every Saddle: The Nihang Sings of Punjab
    Place: Victoria & Albert Museum - London, Cromwell Road, South Kensington, United Kingdom
    Date: Dec 02, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 13.15–14.00

    Talk by: Nick Fleming

    Free illustrated lectures that explore exhibitions, displays and other subjects related to the V&A collections.

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    Old The Conservation of Islamic Book Boards
    Place: Victoria & Albert Museum - London, Cromwell Road, South Kensington, United Kingdom
    Date: Dec 10, 09
    Detail: Talk by: Anne Bancroft

    The talk will discuss the process of conserving two large 12th Century Islamic book boards and their display.The talk will be in the Jameel Gallery where the book boards are on display.

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    Old The Mazarin Chest: Seventeenth Century Japanese Export Lacquer
    Place: Victoria & Albert Museum - London, Cromwell Road, South Kensington, United Kingdom
    Date: Dec 17, 09
    Detail: Talk by Julia Hutt

    The Mazarin Chest is probably the single-most important Japanese object in the V&A. After a recent conservation project, it will form the centrepiece of a display of export lacquer. The talk will look at lacquer for the domestic and export market, highlighting the forms, designs and techniques of export wares.

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    Old Esfahan to Mandalay: Travel in Myanmar and Iran
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 13, 10
    Detail: Asia House Travel Forum with Julian Brown and Hilary Smith

    Time ~ 6:45 PM - 7:45 PM

    As Southeast Asia modernizes rapidly, Myanmar is the last country in the region to remain relatively unchanged. Historian and Burma expert Julian Brown talks about travel in the country from the pagodas and bustling streets of Mandalay to the stunning landscapes of Inle Lake and the Shan Mountains, and the spectacular archaeological sites of Pagan.
    Hilary Smith is the co-author the new Bradt Travel Guide to Iran. She is a guide and lecturer who has travelled frequently in the country since 1976. She discusses the lesser-known monuments as well as world famous sites such as Persepolis, and offers advice for women travellers in the country.

    Tickets £5, Asia House Friends & Concs FREE

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    Old Carpet Ride to Khiva: Talk with Christopher Alexander
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 14, 10
    Detail: Time ~ 6:45 PM - 7:45 PM (Doors 6.30pm)

    Christopher Alexander recounts his efforts to establish a self-sufficient carpet workshop in the ancient walled city of Khiva, a remote desert oasis on the Silk Road in Uzbekistan.
    Initially planning a short visit, Alexander found life at the heart of the glittering madrassahs, mosques and minarets immensely alluring, and stayed for seven years. He immersed himself in the country’s language and rich cultural traditions and worked to reinvigorate the lost art of traditional weaving. Alexander uncovers a world torn between Marx and Mohammed, a place where veils and vodka, tradition and modernity mingle - against a backdrop of forgotten carpet designs, crumbling but magnificent Islamic architecture and scenes evocative of The Arabian Nights.

    Tickets £10, Asia House Friends and concessions £5

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    Old Terracotta Warriors & their Hellenistic Influences
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 19, 10
    Detail: Lunchtime lecture by Lukas Nickel

    Time: 12.15 PM - 2.15 PM
    Light lunch: 12.15 -1.15pm
    Lecture: 1.15pm-2.15pm

    Lukas Nickel presents his controversial thesis that the Terracotta Warriors of the Qin Emperor, one the most iconic symbols of China’s millennial heritage, may have been influenced by Hellenistic sculptural art. An exceptional chance to hear this lecture, which has been presented to audiences in Shanghai, Beijing, and in the Warriors’ home in Xian.
    Lukas Nickel is a lecturer in the art and archaeology of the Silk Road at SOAS and UCL and was consultant for the British Museum exhibition ‘The First Emperor’.

    This lecture is presented in association with the China Society.

    Tickets £10, Asia House Friends and concessions £5

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    Old Chinese Food and Identity: Ancient to Modern
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 27, 10
    Detail: Panel Discussion with Roel Sterckx, Jakob Klein and Fuchsia Dunlop

    Time ~ 6:45 PM - 7:45 PM (Doors 6.30pm)

    A discussion of diet and cuisine’s role in shaping Chinese cultural identity. Roel Sterckx reveals ancient rituals and recipes, exploring the centrality of food to the religion and politics of dynastic China. Jakob Klein discusses food’s relationship to social status in the twentieth century. Fuchsia Dunlop concludes with a challenge to Western dietary taboos: explaining how non-Chinese can learn to appreciate pigs’ ears, and chicken’s feet as a genuine delicacies.
    Roel Sterckx is the Joseph Needham Professor of Chinese History, Science, and Civilization at the University of Cambridge, and author of the forthcoming ‘The Empire of Sense: Food and Sacrifice in Early China’.

    Jakob Klein is deputy chair of the SOAS Food Studies Centre.
    Fuchsia Dunlop is a cook and award winning food writer, specialising in Chinese cuisine.

    Tickets £10, Asia House Friends and concessions £5.

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    Old Science and Islam: Ehsan Masood in conversation with Ziauddin Sardar
    Place: Asia House - London, 63 New Cavendish Street, United Kingdom
    Date: Jan 28, 10
    Detail: Time ~ 6:45 PM - 7:45 PM (Doors 6.30pm)

    The first in a series of talks exploring the history of Asian contributions to science. From Samarkand to Cordoba, from the advances in algebra of Musa al-Khwarizmi in 9th century Baghdad and the engineering of the 13th century Turkish engineer al-Jazari to the medical research of ibn Sina, Islamic scholars made a remarkable contribution to scientific progress. Ehsan Masood charts the history of the Islamic scientific revolution between 700 and 1500CE and considers the status of science in the Islamic world today with writer and pioneering thinker on contemporary Islam Ziauddin Sardar.
    Eshan Masood is Acting Chief Commissioning Editor at Nature magazine and lecturer in International Science Policy at Imperial College London. He writes for Prospect Magazine and is a regular panellist on BBC Radio 4’s ‘Home Planet’.
    Ziauddin Sardar is a writer, scholar, cultural commentator and Professor of Postcolonial Studies at City University, London.

    Tickets £10, Asia House Friends and concessions £5

    For booking please call 020 7307 5454 or email.

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    Asia USA & Canada | Europe & Africa

    Old Gosu-Akae Overglaze Enamel Porcelain Ware
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room 14, Honkan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Nov 24, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 14:00 - 14:30

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    Old The Incense Burner with Lion-Shaped Handle Weight and the Covered Bowl with Stupa-Shaped Handle
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room 5, The Gallery of Horyuji Treasures - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Dec 01, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 14:00 - 14:30

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    Old Dogu Figures: The Shape of Ancient Prayer
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room 20, Honkan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Dec 08, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 14:00 - 14:30

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    Old A Forgotten Design: The islands-in-the-sea motif on a mirror from the Horyuji Treasures
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Reference Room, The Gallery of Horyuji Treasures - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Dec 15, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 14:00 - 14:30

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    Old Gallery Talk: The Power of Dogu
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room 20, Honkan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Dec 17, 09
    Detail: Time - 15:30 (In Japanese)

    Lecture by: Inoue Yoichi, Senior Curator of Japanese Archaeology.

    Limit: 70 seats plus standing
    Free with Museum admission.

    Special exhibition "THE POWER OF DOGU" is charged separately.

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    Old Princess Brides: Sumptuous Trousseaus of the Daimyo Class
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Auditorium, Heiseikan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Dec 19, 09
    Detail: Time ~ 13:30 - 15:00 (door scheduled to open at 13:00) (In Japanese)

    Lecture by: Komatsu Taishu, Senior Curator of Japanese Decorative Art

    Limit: 380 seats (first-come first-served)

    Free with Museum admission.

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    Old Gallery Talk: Dogu Figures and Jomon Clay Masks
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room 20, Honkan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Jan 21, 10
    Detail: Time - 15:30 (In Japanese)

    Lecture by: Shinagawa Yoshiya, Assistant Curator of Japanese Archaeology

    Limit: 70 seats plus standing
    Free with Museum admission

    Special exhibition "THE POWER OF DOGU" is charged separately.

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    Old Genealogy of the Scenes In and Around Kyoto Folding Screens
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Auditorium, Heiseikan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Jan 30, 10
    Detail: Time ~ 13:30 - 15:00 (door scheduled to open at 13:00) (In Japanese)

    Lecture by: Kojima Michihiro, Professor, National Museum of Japanese History / SOKENDAI

    Limit: 380 seats (first-come first-served)

    Free with Museum admission.

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    Old Gallery Talk: The Decline of Dogu and Beyond
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Room 20, Honkan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Feb 04, 10
    Detail: Time - 15:30 (In Japanese)

    Lecture by: Hidaka Shin, Curator of Japanese Archaeology

    Limit: 70 seats plus standing
    Free with Museum admission

    Special exhibition "THE POWER OF DOGU" is charged separately.

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    Old THE POWER OF DOGU: Commemorative lecture: The Birth and Development of Jomon Dogu Figures, and the Appeal of their Unique Forms
    Place: Tokyo National Museum, Auditorium, Heiseikan - Tokyo, 13-9 Ueno Park, Taito-ku, Japan
    Date: Feb 06, 10
    Detail: Time ~ 13:30 - 15:00 (door scheduled to open at 13:00) (In Japanese)

    Lecture by: Harada Masayuki, Senior Specialist(Archaeology) Fine Arts Division, Ageicy for Curtural Affairs

    Limit: 380 seats (* Reservations are required in advance. Random choice when overbooked.)

    Fee: Free with ticket of "THE POWER OF DOGU".

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    Top | Exhibition Public | Fairs | Exhibition Private | Conference/Symposium | Auctions
    Auctions
    USA & Canada Europe & Africa | Asia

    Old Judaica
    Place: Sothebys - New York, 1334 York Avenue at 72nd St, USA
    Date: Nov 24, 09
    Detail:
    TIME: 10.00 AM

    EXHIBITION
    ---------------------------------------

    Wed, 18 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Thu, 19 Nov 09, 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    Fri, 20 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Sat, 21 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Sun, 22 Nov 09, 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    Mon, 23 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM

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    Old Egyptian, Classical, and Western Asiatic Antiquities
    Place: Sothebys - New York, 1334 York Avenue at 72nd St, USA
    Date: Dec 10, 09
    Detail: TIME: 2.00 PM

    EXHIBITION
    ---------------------------------------

    Sat, 5 Dec 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Sun, 6 Dec 09, 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    Mon, 7 Dec 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Tue, 8 Dec 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Wed, 9 Dec 09, 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM

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    Old Fine Asian Art Auction
    Place: Michaan\'s Auctions - Alameda, 2751 Todd Street, California, USA
    Date: Dec 11, 09
    Detail: Featuring a selection of rare pieces from the British Collection of A & J Speelman.

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    Old Fine Works of Asian Art
    Place: Bonhams & Butterfields - San Francisco, 220 San Bruno Avenue, California, USA
    Date: Dec 15, 09
    Detail: The Asian Art Department of Bonhams and Butterfields provides one of the worlds most successful auction venues for selling Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Himalayan, and Southeast Asian Art. Under the directorship of Dessa Goddard, the department is renown for its discoveries of long-lost masterpieces in these fields. San Francisco has become a destination of choice for both new and seasoned collectors and members of the trade for its consistent offerings of fresh objects from private collectors, estates and museums to the marketplace in two tiers of sales: bi-annual auctions of Fine Asian Works of Art and Asian Decorative Art. The experienced department staff is trained in Mandarin, Cantonese, and Japanese language assistance.

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    Old Fine Oriental Rugs and Carpets
    Place: Bonhams & Butterfields - Los Angeles and San Francisco, USA
    Date: Dec 15, 09
    Detail: Time - 10:00

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    Old Israeli Art
    Place: Sothebys - New York, 1334 York Avenue at 72nd St, USA
    Date: Dec 15, 09
    Detail: TIME: 5.00 AM

    LOCATION

    EXHIBITION
    ----------------------------------------

    Wed, 18 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Thu, 19 Nov 09, 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    Fri, 20 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Sat, 21 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 5:00 PM
    Sun, 22 Nov 09, 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM
    Mon, 23 Nov 09, 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM

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    Europe & Africa USA & Canada | Asia

    Old Arts d'Asie
    Place: Espace Tajan - Paris, 37, rue des Mathurins, France
    Date: Nov 25, 09
    Detail: Time - 14:00

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    Old Tableaux Orientalistes et Art Moderne Arabe et Iranien
    Place: Christies - Paris, 9 Avenue Matignon, France
    Date: Dec 04, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 2pm

    Viewing Times
    ----------------------------------------
    Dec 2 10am - 6pm
    Dec 3 10am - 6pm
    Dec 12 10am - 6pm
    Dec 14 10am - 6pm
    Dec 15 10am - 6pm
    Dec 16 10am - 6pm

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    Old Asian Art - China, India, Tibet/Nepal, South East Asia, Japan, Korea
    Place: Piasa - Paris, Drouot Richelieu, Salle 15 - 9, rue Drouot, France
    Date: Dec 09, 09
    Detail: Hours : 14h

    Exhibition : Le 08/12 de 11h à 18h et le 09/12 de 11h à 12h

    Informations : Pour tout renseignement, ou si vous désirez inclure des lots dans cette vente, veuillez contacter la maison de ventes au 01 53 34 10 10.

    Expert : TH. PORTIER

    Description : Catalogue visible environ 15 jours avant la vente.

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    Old Asian Art - China, India, Tibet/Nepal, South East Asia, Japan, Korea
    Place: Kunsthaus Lempertz - Cologne, Neumarkt 3, Germany
    Date: Dec 11, 09 to Dec 12, 09
    Detail: Previews: One week prior to the auctions

    Catalogues: Published and on the Internet circa three weeks before the sale.

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    Old Art d'Asie
    Place: Christies - Paris, 9 Avenue Matignon, France
    Date: Dec 21, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 10:30am

    Viewing Times
    ----------------------------------------
    Dec 18 10am - 6pm
    Dec 19 10am - 6pm
    Dec 20 2pm - 6pm


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    Asia USA & Canada | Europe & Africa

    Old Autumn Auction
    Place: Rong Bao Arts Auctions Co. Ltd. - Beijing, 36 Liulichang West Street, Hewai Xuanwu, People's Republic Of China
    Date: Nov 26, 09
    Detail: Preview Time: November 23-25, 2009, Day

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    Old Asian Auction Week
    Place: Larasati Auctioneers at Mandarin Oriental Hotel - Central, 5 Connaught Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Nov 27, 09 to Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Larasati Auctioneers will be collaborating with three other leading Asian auction houses to bring the fourth Asian Auction Week to Hong Kong on 29 November at the Mandarin Oriental, Hong Kong from 2pm (preview starts 27 November from 1pm to 7pm and on 28 November, 10am to 8pm). Larasati will be offering 40 boutique lots featuring works by masters like Affandi’s “Cock Fight”, Yi Hwan Kwon’s “Family Ties – Boy & Girl” as well as Ronald Venutra’s “Balloon”.

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    Old Chinese Paintings & Scholar's Object
    Place: Treasure Auctioneer Limited - Central, 22/F, Regent Centre, 88 Queen's Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Nov 28, 09
    Detail: Chinese Paintings & Scholar's Object

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    Old Southeast Asian Modern and Contemporary Art
    Place: Christies - Central, 22nd floor Alexandra House, 18 Chater Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 10am

    Viewing Times
    ----------------------------------------
    Nov 27 10:30am - 6pm

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    Old Asian Contemporary Art & Chinese 20th Century Art (Evening Sale)
    Place: Christies - Central, 22nd floor Alexandra House, 18 Chater Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Nov 29, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 7pm

    Viewing Times
    ----------------------------------------
    Nov 28 10:30am - 6:30pm
    Nov 30 10:30am - 2pm

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    Old Asian Contemporary Art (Day Sale)
    Place: Christies - Central, 22nd floor Alexandra House, 18 Chater Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Nov 30, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 5pm

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    Old Fine Chinese Modern Paintings
    Place: Christies - Central, 22nd floor Alexandra House, 18 Chater Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Nov 30, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 10am

    Viewing Times
    -----------------------------------------
    Nov 29 10:30am - 6:30pm

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    Old Fine Chinese Classical Paintings and Calligraphy
    Place: Christies - Central, 22nd floor Alexandra House, 18 Chater Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Dec 01, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 10am

    Viewing Times
    ----------------------------------------
    Nov 30 10:30am - 6:30pm

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    Old Important Chinese Ceramics and Works of Art
    Place: Christies - Central, 22nd floor Alexandra House, 18 Chater Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Dec 02, 09
    Detail: Auction Time: 10am

    Viewing Times
    -----------------------------------------
    Dec 1 10:30am - 6:30pm

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    Old Chinese Ceramics, Works of Art, Magnificent Jewels, Fine Jadeite & Watches
    Place: Treasure Auctioneer Limited - Central, 22/F, Regent Centre, 88 Queen's Road, Hong Kong
    Date: Dec 19, 09
    Detail: Chinese Ceramics, Works of Art, Magnificent Jewels, Fine Jadeite & Watches

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