Culture
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——北京大学斯坦福中心及北京大学美术学院联合举办———
 
在匠人和思想者之间:一个艺术家的创作实践
Between Craftsman and Thinker: My Practice as An Artist
讲者Speaker:谢晓泽 XIE XIAOZE  艺术家、斯坦福大学美术教授 Artist, Professor of Art, Stanford University
主持 Chair:     丁宁     DING NING   北京大学艺术学院教授 Vice Dean, School of Arts, Peking University
 
日期 Date:    2014年9月15日  Sep 15, 2014   
时间 Time:      17:00 - 18:15
地点 Venue: 北京大学斯坦福中心 Stanford Center at Peking University
 
谢教授将以大量幻灯介绍他20年来穿越绘画、装置和录像等媒介丰富的创作,
并探讨他的艺术理念、创作方式与过程、以及艺术品作为形式要素和劳动过程
的有机结合。名艺术家谢晓泽现担任斯坦福大学美术系教授。他的作品在休斯
顿美术馆、斯科茨代尔当代美术馆和圣何塞艺术博物馆永久收藏;曾获得琼·
切尔基金会和波洛克和克伦瑟基金会的资助,及凤凰城美术馆和达拉斯美术
馆等艺术大奖。
 
In this richly illustrated lecture, Xiaoze Xie will introduce his diverse 
bodies of work including painting, installation, video and photography over 
the past 20 years. The artist will share his creative process and discuss his 
ideas about the making of art as a unique combination of conceptual basis, 
formal elements and the process of labor. Xiaoze Xie is an internationally 
recognized artist who has exhibited extensively in the US and abroad. His 
work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, 
the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art and the San Jose Museum of 
Art. Xie received the Painter and Sculptor’s Grant from the Joan Mitchell 
Foundation, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant and artist awards from 
Phoenix Art Museum and Dallas Museum of Art. Xie is the Paul L. & Phyllis 
Wattis Professor of Art at Stanford University.
 
 
网上报名 Online registration: http://scpku.fsi.stanford.edu/events/registration/217928
电邮咨询 Email inquiry:        lap.li@stanford.edu
电话咨询 Phone inquiry:        86 10 6276 5782
活动地图 Map:                         http://scpku.fsi.stanford.edu/content/traveling-scpku-and-beijing
进入校园须知 PKU entrance:
请携带身份证明文件从北京大学东侧门进入。我们将在东侧门摆放路牌引导大家走到斯坦福中心。
Please enter from the Northeast gate of Peking University with your photo ID. Directional signage will be available starting from this gate.
 

 

Stanford Center at Peking University
The Lee Jung Sen Building
Langrun Yuan
Peking University
No.5 Yiheyuan Road
Haidian District
Beijing, P.R.China 100871

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SCPKU Pre-Doctoral Fellow, Fall 2014
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Allison Rhines received her PhD in Biology in 2015 with a research focus in mathematical modeling of infectious disease dynamics and control.  As an undergraduate at Stanford, her honors thesis on demographic change in China focused on rural-to-urban migration, and its impact on ideas and behaviors of preference for male children in the context of the One Child Policy; for this work, she conducted interviews with rural migrants in Mandarin in Xi'an, China.  Pursuing her master's as a Gates Scholar at the University of Cambridge, she used statistical models to relationship between demography and infectious disease.  Her PhD research at Stanford furthered her interests in the relationship between population sturcture and infectious disease dynamics.  At SCPKU, she collaborated with scholars at Peking University Health Sciences Center to study drug resistance in TB cases in Shenzhen.  Following completion of her PhD, she hopes to continue to pursue her focus in infectious disease control, with a particular interest in China.  
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The Stanford Laptop Orchestra (SLOrk) is a computer-mediated ensemble and classroom that explores cutting-edge technology in combination with conventional musical contexts - while radically transforming both.

Stanford Laptop Orchestra - Live in China
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Stanford Center at Peking University
The Lee Jung Sen Building
Peking University
No.5 Yiheyuan Road Haidian District
Beijing, P.R.China 100871
Directions/Map

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SCPKU held its first graduate seminar in Summer 2013. Taught by Professor Richard Vinograd in Stanford’s Department of Art and Art History, the seminar was entitled “Site-Based Art Historical Research in China: Issues and Opportunities.” Professor Vinograd recently shared his perspectives on the course and his research on Chinese art history.

 

Question: Why did you decide to apply for SCPKU's Graduate Seminar Program? What did you hope to bring and learn in China as part of the program?

Vinograd: I applied to the SCPKU Graduate Seminar program for some of the unique advantages it offers. These include the opportunities for students to encounter works of art in their full physical and spatial environments. There is also the opportunity to interact with Chinese counterpart students and faculty, to better understand their approaches to research and historical scholarship, and to build useful relationships for the future. In turn, my students and I offered our own perspectives and approaches to Chinese art historical studies.

 

Question: Can you tell us a little about your research and its connection to China?

Vinograd: I am primarily an historian of Chinese art, focusing on Chinese painting and prints from the last millennium, up to the present. I have written focused studies of Chinese portraiture, landscape painting, and about a number of individual artists and themes. Most of my own research is based on objects in museums or other collections, but I've also written more generally about art in particular locations -- mural paintings in temples, architectural monuments and sculptural programs in cave shrines So I was particularly happy that during the summer program I was able to visit some sites that I hadn't directly experienced before.

 

Question: What did you learn during your stay in China? What were the most surprising/interesting things that you encountered?

Vinograd: I learn something new almost every time I encounter an original monument or work of art, no matter how familiar, and I try to impress upon my students the value of continued close examination and questioning of original monuments every chance they get. One of the most striking aspects of several of the ancient temples we visited was the discovery of calligraphic inscriptions on the undersides of roof cross beams, that documented episodes of repair and renovation to the buildings that were sometimes centuries old.

 

Question: Was this your first time taking students on an overseas course/field trip? Please share some of the challenges you may have encountered on your other trips (and/or this trip) and how you resolved them.

Vinograd: I've taken students on overseas field trips several times, to Japan, Taiwan, and China. Usually these have been to study especially rare and important exhibitions and attend associated scholarly conferences, sometimes with visits to archaeological, historical, or architectural sites included. Usually the challenges of such events are logistical and linguistic, including absorbing the content of lectures and discussions carried on in many different Chinese accents. Since the SCPKU seminar focused so heavily on site visits, we frequently had to negotiate access to normally restricted areas, or permission to illuminate and photograph murals in dimly-lit temple halls. Our colleagues from Peking University were especially helpful on those occasions.

 

Question: How was your experience at SCPKU, and how is it different from other Stanford Centers you may have visited before?

Vinograd: Our experience at SCPKU was very positive -- the facilities were great and the resident staff was very helpful. I haven't taught at any other Stanford Overseas Programs, so I don't have that basis for comparison, but I can confidently say that SCPKU serves a very useful purpose in providing a platform and gateway for study and research in China.

 

Question: What are your plans in China, if any, for the future?

Vinograd: I visit China regularly for research, exhibitions, and conferences and I expect to continue those activities in the future.

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Department of Art & Art History
435 Lausen Mall
Stanford University
Stanford, California 94305

(650) 723-6282
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Paul L. and Phyllis Wattis Professor in Art
Professor of Art and Art History
xiaoze_xie_headshot.jpg
PhD
Faculty Fellow at the Stanford Center at Peking University, June to September 2014
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