Foreign Relations & International Law

ChinaTalk: How Chinese Ink Painting Survived the CCP

Jordan Schneider
Tuesday, May 3, 2022, 5:13 PM

How did Chinese painting, arguably the elitist of arts, fare during the Cultural Revolution? To discuss ink paintings, socialist realism, oil paintings and the political upheavals that formed their backdrop, I’m joined by artist Arnold Chang and Curator of Chinese Paintings at the MET in NY, Joe Scheier-Dawlberg.

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How did Chinese painting, arguably the elitist of arts, fare during the Cultural Revolution? To discuss ink paintings, socialist realism, oil paintings and the political upheavals that formed their backdrop, I’m joined by artist Arnold Chang and Curator of Chinese Paintings at the MET in NY, Joe Scheier-Dawlberg.

We discuss:

  • Whether chaotic periods produce the best art

  • The role of escapism in the creation of Chinese paintings

  • Painting, the CCP and the four olds

  • Why so many Chinese paintings have writing on them

  • Which university exhibited a 12 by 20 foot oil painting of yours truly without prior permission

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James Cahill lecture series: https://ieas.berkeley.edu/publications/ieas-publications/james-cahill-video-lectures/pure-and-remote-view-all-lectures

Cover art is the random giant painting of me.

Check out my teacher's paintings here

Outtro music: 良宵引, a Ming dynasty banger https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s99gDVECTro

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Jordan Schneider is the host of the ChinaTalk podcast and newsletter. He previously worked at Kwai, Bridgewater and the Eurasia Group. His Chinese landscape paintings "show promise."

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