Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art

Coordinates: 53°29′5″N 2°14′15″W / 53.48472°N 2.23750°W / 53.48472; -2.23750

Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art
Art Gallery
Traded as Chinese View Arts Association, 1987-2000; Chinese Art Centre, 2000-2013[1]
Industry Arts
Founded 1986
Headquarters 13 Thomas Street, Manchester, England, M4 1EU
Revenue £421,147 [2]
Website Official website

The Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art is an contemporary art gallery based in Manchester, England, which aims to advance the education of the public in contemporary Chinese arts and culture. It is currently based on Thomas Street in Manchester’s Northern Quarter in part of the renovated Smithfield Market Hall.

History

Chinese View Art Association (1986-1989)

Programme for the Chinese View '86 festival organised by the CVAA in 1986

The Chinese View Art Association (CVAA) was established in 1986 by a group of Manchester based artist of Chinese descent to foster a positive understanding of Chinese identity and culture within the local Chinese community and the general British public.[3] The artists were frustrated that their work was not being seen in mainstream venues, and was not included in the Black Arts Movement of the time. The CVAA, led by Hong Kong Born artist, Amy Lai, held the Chinese View ‘86 festival, which celebrated Chinese art and crafts in its many forms[4]. This was followed by Chinese View ‘88 Festival which marked Chinese New Year in 1989.

Chinese Art Centre, Charlotte Street (1989-1996)

With Financial support from the Manchester City Council and Arts Council England, the CVAA opened the Chinese Art Centre on Charlotte Street in Manchester’s Chinatown which was officially opened by Diana, Princess of Wales in 1990.[5] The Centre was involved with the local Chinese community and it’s programme looked at traditional Chinese arts and crafts such as calligraphy, brush paintings, and Chinese opera.[5] In 1992 the Centre held its first large scale contemporary art exhibition,Beyond the Chinese Takeaway, which reflected on the experience of second and third generation British Chinese artists.[3]

Chinese Art Centre, Edge Street, (1997-2003)

By the mid-1990s, headed by new CEO Sarah Champion, the Centre moved to new premises at Edge Street in Manchester’s Northern Quarter in 1997. The move marked the Centre’s aim to attract a wider audience and began its transition to a contemporary art gallery.[5]

This was an important time in the development of the Centre; the Hong Kong handover saw much focus on Chinese culture in the British media. This dramatic increase in mainstream recognition of all things Chinese encouraged the centre to change direction and, rather than just exhibiting work, proactively support the careers of artists of Chinese descent. In addition, 1997 marked the year that the organisation extended its remit to become a national charity and started to work internationally, rather than just with British Chinese artists. In 1999 Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art produced Representing the People - its first major touring exhibition. Touring to four key national venues and seen by 250,000 people, Representing the People was the first independent exhibition to show artists from Mainland China in the UK.[3]

Chinese Art Centre, Thomas Street, (2003-2013)

Chinese Art Centre on the left in 2008

In 2003 Chinese Art Centre moved to a new purpose built building on Thomas Street following a £2.5 million Lottery grant.[6] The new building, designed by OMI Architects and awarded a RIBA prize for architecture in 2004, featured a large gallery space, teahouse, shop, offices, resource area, and studio and living area for resident artists.[7] The Centre opened with a specially commissioned work by New York based artist, Xu Bing.[6]

In 2006-2007, in association with the Live Art Development Agency, the Centre held the VITAL Festivals.[8] The Festivals presented Live Art performances, film screenings, and artists' talks, presentations and a conference associated with performance artists from China and of Chinese descent.

In 2010, Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art organised a Liberation Exhibition - an exhibition growing out of an ongoing discussion with Carol Yinghua Lu and Liu Ding following the blocked use of a selection of social networking and self-publishing websites such as Twitter, Facebook, and YouTube in China.[9] This exhibition takes the form of a visual art exhibition as well as a series of events, a debate, and a blog discussion among the curators of the exhibition and invited guests. Speakers at the Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art discussed a range of perspectives on the online media and the power of social networking sites. Guest speakers include exhibiting artist Brendan Fan, FaceRook artist Candy Chen Shuhui, Laurence Kaye from Pirate Party UK, Matthew Trump from the Northern Cybercrime Forensics Group, and Tom Kinniburgh, Associate Producer of the Application Company Chillingo Limited.[10] It proposes a close look into the openness and potential of the Internet world as well as its susceptibility to power and political manipulation and ideological controls. The event is sponsored kindly by City Inn Manchester, and supported by Arts Council England and AGMA, Association of Greater Manchester Authorities.[11]

Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art (2013-)

In October 2013 the Chinese Arts Centre became the Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art (CFCCA), cementing the organisation position as:

"future-facing organisation responding to China’s growing cultural and economic influence".[12]

Collections

Art Collection

Since 2013, the Centre has worked in partnership with the University of Salford to build a collection of Chinese contemporary art works[13]. The collection is held by the Salford Museum and Art Gallery.[14]

Library and Archive

Following a project funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund, the Centre opened its library and archive to the public in 2018. The library contains publications collected by the Centre relating to Chinese contemporary art, including exhibition catalogues, artist monographs, and festival publications. The archive collections contains the record of the Centre and it predecessors, covering the development of the Centre & its programme history.[15]

Selected Artists who have exhibited at the Centre

References

  1. Companies House, Centre for Chinese contemporary Art, Company number 02137427, retrieved 2018-07-06
  2. "The Charity Commission for England and Wales". Charity-commission.gov.uk. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
  3. 1 2 3 Aesthetica (2006-03-07), Interview with Ying Tan, Curator, 30 Years of CFCCA, Centre for Chinese Contemporary Arts, Manchester, Aesthetica, retrieved 2018-07-06
  4. Chinese View Arts Association (1986), Press Release 'an eastern idea that's a real cracker', CFCCA, retrieved 2018-07-06
  5. 1 2 3 Kennedy, Beccy (2015). "Outside Chinatown: the Evolution of Manchester's Chinese Arts Centre as a Cultural Translator for Contemporary Chinese art". Modern China Studies. Center for Modern China. 2016 (1): 58. ISSN 2160-0317. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
  6. 1 2 Ward, David (2003-11-28). "Chinese arts centre's new home". The Guardian. The Guardian. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  7. "Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art". OMI architects. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  8. "VITAL 06: International Chinese Live Art Festival". Live Art Development Agency. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  9. Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art. "Liberation Exhibition". chinese-arts-centre.org. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  10. Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art. "Liberation Talk". eventbrite.com. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  11. Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art. "Centre for Chinese Contemporary Art". chinese-arts-centre.org. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
  12. Dunbar, Zoe (2016-02-25). "Connecting with China". Arts Professional. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  13. "Art Collection". CFCCA. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
  14. University of Salford Art Collection. "New Collection of Chinese Contemporary Art". University of Salford. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
  15. CFCCA. "Archive and Library, CFCCA". CFCCA. Retrieved 2018-07-06.
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