Colloquia
Documentary Photography, 1951−2003
An international symposium in conjunction with the exhibition “Humanism in China: A Contemporary Record of Photography” on view at the China Institute, New York, from 24 September−13 December 2009.
Western photographers have been showing China to Westerners for 150 years, and photography has been a major medium in Western museums since the 1950s. It was not until 2003, however, that the Guangdong Museum of Art exhibited the first permanent collection of works by Chinese documentary photographers ever assembled by a Chinese museum. The Guangdong Museum’s collection was selected by a curatorial committee of photographers who spent two years touring more than 20 provinces, viewing 100,000 photographs, and selecting 600 works by 248 photographers. Beginning on 24 September 2009, the China Institute Gallery in New York will have the privilege of holding the first exhibition of this collection in America, featuring a selection of 100 of these photographs. In association with this event, the Tang Center for East Asian Art will host a symposium, “China Seen by the Chinese: Documentary Photography, 1951−2003,” at Princeton University on 24 October 2009. Presentations will consider historical and cross-cultural perspectives, critical and theoretical approaches to the subject, and the problem of defining “documentary” photography.
Related
Symposium Program
Registration and coffee
8:30–9:30 am
Welcome and Introduction
Jerome Silbergeld
Princeton University
“Humanism in China”: The China Institute Exhibition
Sara Judge McCalpin
China Institute
Morning Session
Chair: Jerome Silbergeld, Princeton University
China Seen by the Chinese: Documentary Photography, 1951–2003
Jerome Silbergeld
Princeton University
Documentary Photography Projects: Some Observations
James Elkins
School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Sha Fei and the Beginning of Chinese Social Documentary Photography
Eliza Ho
Ohio State University
Afternoon Session
Chair: Dora C.Y. Ching, Princeton University
Reclaiming Documentary Photography
Richard K. Kent
Franklin and Marshall College
Famine and Bare-Foot Children
David J. Clark
University of Bolton, UK, in cooperation with Dalian College of Image Art; Visual Journalism at Ateneo de Manila University, Philippines
Ecologies of Photographs
William Schaefer
University of California, Berkeley
Problems of Perspective in Chinese Documentary Photography
Bridget Alsdorf
Princeton University
Discussion
Conclusion