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■UPCOMING
EVENTS ■PAST EVENTS
MAKE NEW FRIENDS! Check our new events for the fall!
Afternoon Tea: On the third Saturday of every month at
3:00 pm, the Friends’ Members of the Guangdong Museum of Art gather for an
Afternoon Tea to learn more about contemporary and traditional Chinese art and
culture, as well as western art and art history. Friends enjoy light
refreshments and a slide lecture that prompts an interesting dialogue on art and
society. - May 21, 2005: Traditional-Style Watercolor and
Calligraphy Demonstration Artist, Tracy Xie, will demonstration
techniques of traditional-style watercolor painting and calligraphy. Afterwards,
members will get a chance to give it a try! -June 25, 2005: Ancient
Chinese Sculpture (Please note the date since this is not
the third Saturday of the month) Museum Educator Adela Liao will
discuss some of the most famous ancient sculptures in Chinese history, revealing
their mysteries and the history surrounding their creation. - July
16, 2005: Artist Wang Jianguo has been making prints of Chinese urban
and rural scenes for 40 years. A Guangzhou local, Wang Jianguo has watched the
area transformed and has recorded some of the changing landscapes in his work.
He will talk about his work and show some of his original prints. -
August 13, 2005: Artist Talk: Documentary Photography by Xu Pei
Wu Documentary photographer Xu Pei Wu has won several national
awards for his documentation of the transformation of the Pearl River New Town.
The Pearl River New Town was once an area on the fringes of Guangzhou,
specifically Tianhe, with a racetrack, prostitution business, and migrant
workers squatting in shanty homes, but is now a booming high-class, residential
area. In this series, Xu Pei Wu captures some of the dichotomies of these
landscapes. His work has been exhibited in the Ping Yao International Festival
of Photography as well as the Guangdong Museum of Art’s “Humanism in China”
exhibition (December 2003) and the museum’s more recent International
Photography Biennial (January 2005). September 17, 2005: Traditional
Culture: Folk Art of Paper Cutting The tradition of paper cutting
has been around since before the 6th century. Paper cuts, which are created by
hand applying a knife or scissors, have traditionally served religious or simply
decorative purposes. The technique has also been used as a means for defining
gender roles. It is sometimes impossible to believe the detailed work and skill
involved in paper cutting.
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