The CMA Collection consists of four main collecting areas: modern and contemporary, European, Asian, and American art. While the collection galleries are temporarily closed for an exciting revamp, visitors are invited to explore these categories in Art History 101, a casual lecture series. This time, dive into Asian works in the CMA Collection with art historian and educator Dr. Amanda Wangwright.
Sign up for the full series of four classes or one class at a time. Today’s class focuses on Buddhist art and architecture.
Asian art series: $80 / $64 for members
Single class: $25 / $20 for members
Weekly Topics:
~ September 8 — Chinese Funerary Art: Creating Underground Palaces for the Afterlife
~ September 22 — Buddhist Art and Architecture: Buddhas, Pagodas, and Karmic Merit
~ October 6 — Early Modern Japanese Art and the Global Art World
~ October 20 — Traditions and Technology in Modern and Contemporary Asian Art
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Amanda Wangwright serves as associate professor and art history director of the Center for Asian Studies at the University of South Carolina. She has published on 20th-century Chinese art’s transnational patronage networks, conceptualizations of gender and the body, and unfolding canonization. Her book, The Golden Key: Modern Women Artists and Gender Negotiations in Republican China (1911–1949), investigates artists’ public personas and feminist artistic practice, as well as the wartime developments that led to their exclusion from the canon of modern Chinese art. Wangwright’s other recent publications similarly reconstruct the transitions and transactions of the art world in this pivotal period in Chinese history, including a book chapter demonstrating how the female nude became the visual model of the national reform movement and an article reframing the war years as a period of vibrant artistic exchange and transnational patronage. Her most recent article contends that a still life by the modernist painter Qiu Ti (1906–1958) served as a complex visual rebuttal to the socio-political pressures she encountered in the leadup to the Second Sino-Japanese War (1937–1945).
Current research projects include a monograph on the modern art of wartime China (c. 1937–1949), which explores the factionalism and fanaticism of wartime China's art community and addresses topics such as the anxiety of national erasure as pictured in romanticized depictions of the minorities of the Chinese interior, artist-led campaigns soliciting wartime support from international audiences, and the collaborative art activism of the anti-Japanese resistance movement. An additional research project focuses on the portrayal of artists in popular culture and the modern professionalization of art in in early 20th-century China. A separate line of research analyzes Republican-period depictions of the male nude in natural landscapes in connection with shifting perspectives of modern masculinity.
You may also like the following events from Columbia Museum of Art:
- Next Monday, 30th June, 11:00 am, Art History 101: European Art, Medieval to Modernist in Columbia
- Next Wednesday, 2nd July, 10:00 am, Gladys’ Gang Toddler Edition: Color Me Glad in Columbia
- Next Thursday, 3rd July, 10:00 am, Free First Thursday at the CMA in Columbia
Also check out other
Arts events in Columbia,
Workshops in Columbia,
Nonprofit events in Columbia.