Imagining Possible Futures in the Work of Cao Fei

Authors

  • Yifan Yang Pace Universty
  • Miko Fusco Pace University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47611/jsr.v13i2.2511

Keywords:

Contemporary Art, Chinese Art, Urbanism, Environmental Humanities, Cao Fei, Globalization

Abstract

Cao Fei’s widely celebrated career presents a critique and exploration of China’s rapid urbanization and its consequences for human life and the natural environment. Cao’s works are very focused on urban environments, but they maintain an ongoing concern with the implications of urbanization and globalization for human self-expression. This paper examines later works, namely Haze and Fog (2013) and La Town (2014), with a focus on their uncanny defamiliarization of urban life as a vehicle for ecological critique, followed by an analysis of earlier works such as Cosplayers (2004) and Whose Utopia (2006). In all four projects, Cao highlights the fragility and potential crumbling of a neo-liberal, globalized China, through the lens of human residents’ engagement with infrastructures along with commercial and cultural spaces. While her more recent work suggests apocalyptic outcomes for these historical and political-economic processes, her earlier work is more committed to portraying alternative possibilities for the future through self-expression in unlikely settings. The ultimate outcome of Cao’s pioneering work is a strong case for the human potential to imagine otherwise, to create new futures within strongly predetermined histories, and to perform new possibilities within rapidly expanding and decaying urban spaces.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

References or Bibliography

References

Berry, C. (2015). Images of urban China in Cao Fei’s ‘magical metropolises.’ China Information, 29(2), 202–225. https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X15588722

Clemens, J. (2011). Virtually anywhere real-time new-old avatar-human entertainment art: Cao Fei online. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Art, 11(1), 112–131. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14434318.2011.11432620

Cao, F. (2004). Cosplayers. http://www.caofei.com/works.aspx?year=2004&wtid=4

Cao, F. (2006). Whose Utopia. http://www.caofei.com/works.aspx?year=2006&wtid=4

Cao, F. (2013). Haze and Fog. http://www.caofei.com/works.aspx?year=2013&wtid=4

Cao, F. (2014). La Town. http://www.caofei.com/works.aspx?year=2014&wtid=4

Chau, A. (2017). “An archivist’s fantasy gone mad”: The age of exhibition in Cao Fei’s posthuman trilogy. Concentric: Literary and Cultural Studies, 43(2), 221-247. https://doi.org/10.6240/concentric.lit.2017.43.2.10.

Davidson, J. C. (2020). Environment, labor, and video: (Eco)feminist interpellations of Chineseness in the work of Yuk King Tan, Cao Fei, and Wu Mali. In Staging art and Chineseness: Politics of trans/nationalism and global expositions (pp. 89–122). Manchester University Press.

Ferrari, R. (2012). Pop goes the avant-garde: Experimental theatre in contemporary China. London: Seagull Books

Fok, S. (2011). Micro-narratives in contemporary Chinese art: A case study of Cao Fei's Pearl River Delta anti-heroes. Asian Studies Review, 35(4), 499-520. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2011.628009.

Haddon, R. (2018). Embodied modernity: The gendered landscape of contemporary Chinese art. New Zealand Journal of Asian Studies, 20, 115-36.

Hanru, H. (2007). Everyday miracles. Universe in Universe. http://universes-in-universe.de/car/venezia/eng/2007/tour/chn/press-01.pdf.

Hanru, H. (2008, February 25). Politics of intimacy. Cao Fei. http://www.caofei.com/texts.aspx?id=17&year=2008&aitid=1.

Hirsch, M. (2008). The generation of postmemory. Poetics Today, 29(1), 103-128. https://doi.org/10.1215/03335372-2007-019.

Hoerning, J. (2022). Twilight of the communist idols: Political notes on Cao Fei. ArtAsiaPacific, (127), 66-71. https://www.burgercollection.org/usr/library/documents/main/aap_127_cao-fei.pdf.

Jim, A. M. W. (2013). The different worlds of Cao Fei. Yishu: The Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, 82–90. https://yishu-online.com/wp-content/uploads/mm-products/uploads/2012_v11_03_jim_a_p082.pdf

Johnson, I. (2016). The presence of the past: A coda. In J. N. Wasserstrom, ed., The Oxford illustrated history of modern China, pp. 301-323. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Lu, S. H. (2015). Artistic interventions in contemporary China. China information, 29(2), 282-297. https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X15590346.

Merlin, M. (2018). Cao Fei: Rethinking the global/local discourse. Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, 5(1), 41–60. https://doi.org/10.1386/jcca.5.1.41_1

Mo, X. (2010). RMB City: A second life-based project by Cao Fei. New York University. https://miap.hosting.nyu.edu/program/student_work/2010spring/RMB_City_y.pdf.

Scott, I. (2006). Interview with Cao Fei. The White Review. https://www.thewhitereview.org/feature/interview-with-cao-fei/

Sleek. (2021, September 20). Cao Fei on ‘truth,’ utopia and pre-internet nostalgia. https://www.sleek-mag.com/article/cao-fei-on-truth-utopia-and-pre-internet-nostalgia/

Smithson, R. (1996). Robert Smithson: The collected writings. University of California Press.

Snels, J. (2022). Virtual connectedness in times of crisis: Chinese online art exhibitions during the COVID-19 pandemic. World Art, 12(1), 95-118. https://doi.org/10.1080/21500894.2021.1991465.

Stojkovic, J. (2013). The city vanishes: Urban landscape in staged Chinese photography. History of Photography, 37(3), 360–369. https://doi.org/10.1080/03087298.2013.790603

Thomas, T. (2014). The ‘post-human’ Internet dimension: Ai Weiwei and Cao Fei online. Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, 1(2–3), 177–199. https://doi.org/10.1386/jcca.1.2-2.177_1

Thomas, T. (2015). Context, challenge, conversion: Chinese feminism via contemporary art'. Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art, 14(5), 21-40.

Wang, M., & Valjakka, M. (2015). Urbanized interfaces: Visual arts in Chinese cities. China Information, 29(2), 139–153. https://doi.org/10.1177/0920203X15589704.

Wu, R. (2021, February 15). “Whose utopia” – Cao Fei at the museum of modern art. IFA. https://ifacontemporary.org/whose-utopia-cao-fei/.

Yau, E. C. (2010). Film and digital video as testimony of Chinese modernity: trauma, history, and writing. Cinema Journal, 50(1), 154-162. https://doi.org/10.1353/cj.2010.a405364.

Zhao, X., & Keane, M. (2023). Sino-futurism and alternative imaginaries of digital China. Media International Australia, 1329878X231215108. https://doi.org/10.1177/1329878X231215108.

Published

05-31-2024

How to Cite

Yang, Y., & Fusco, M. (2024). Imagining Possible Futures in the Work of Cao Fei. Journal of Student Research, 13(2). https://doi.org/10.47611/jsr.v13i2.2511

Issue

Section

Research Articles