{"title":"亚洲协会声明","authors":"Melissa C. Chiu","doi":"10.1353/aaa.2014.0010","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Asia Society’s commitment to publishing scholarship on Asian art now has a history of more than half a century. The continuation of Archives of Asian Art has been one of our efforts to foster research and new thinking in the field. In recent years, this has meant the inclusion of contemporary art alongside historical investigations. One of the pioneers in these endeavors has been my predecessor, Dr. Vishakha N. Desai, who stepped down from her position as Asia Society President on September 1, 2012, after a distinguished tenure with the society of 22 years, which she began as Director of Asia Society Museum. While at Asia Society, Dr. Desai published, edited, or contributed to numerous books as well as many articles on traditional and contemporary art. Among the exhibitions for which she received the most praise is Gods, Guardians, and Lovers: Temple Sculptures from North India, A.D. 700–1200, co-curated with Darielle Mason in 1993. Dr. Desai is also well known for commissioning large-scale contemporary art exhibitions in the 1990s, including Asia/America: Identities in Contemporary Asian American Art (1994), Contemporary Art in Asia: Traditions/Tensions (1996), and Inside Out: New Chinese Art (1998), each groundbreaking in its own right. In 2012, she oversaw the inauguration of two major architectural projects for Asia Society centers in Hong Kong and Houston, Texas. Both new buildings include gallery spaces for exhibitions of Asian art. The field of Asian art scholarship has undergone many changes in the past decade, with new archaeological discoveries, the museum boom in Asia that has seen fast-paced collection formation, and the emergence of an appreciation for contemporary art. Asia Society responds to these changes in different ways. Our fall 2014 exhibition in New York focuses on a Korean American artist and his vision of the future through technology such as robotics and computer-generated imagery: Nam June Paik: Becoming Robot. Next spring we present Buddhist Art of Myanmar, the first major American loan exhibition focused on the art and culture of a country largely closed off to the world for decades. Both the exhibition and accompanying scholarly catalogue promise to be significant contributions to our understanding of Myanmar’s culture and Buddhism. In addition to our ongoing plans for exhibitions of traditional, modern, and contemporary art, we are also establishing initiatives designed to respond to the changing landscape of Asian art. Through the formation of the Asia Arts and Museum Network, Asia Society will convene museum professionals from Asia, North America, and Europe for face-to-face discussions to identify and navigate the challenges and opportunities developing in the new museum ecology of Asia. This takes the form of a large-scale annual Arts & Museum Summit at Asia Society Hong Kong Center, which is open to scholars and museum professionals, and the U.S.-China Museum Leaders Forum, which allows American museum professionals and their Chinese counterparts to meet and connect on a personal level to develop shared projects. Following the Chinese government’s announcement that they will build thousands of new museums in the next decade, there is a great and urgent demand in China to exchange knowledge and best practices with their North American peers. Archives of Asian Art plays an important role in bringing to light new thinking on Asian art through research. It remains as important as ever to hear from art historians—their areas of research, theories, challenges to historical preconceptions, and ways of connecting the past to the present. Archives is one of the few forums for such discussions.","PeriodicalId":41400,"journal":{"name":"ARCHIVES OF ASIAN ART","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2015-07-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1353/aaa.2014.0010","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Asia Society Statement\",\"authors\":\"Melissa C. Chiu\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/aaa.2014.0010\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Asia Society’s commitment to publishing scholarship on Asian art now has a history of more than half a century. The continuation of Archives of Asian Art has been one of our efforts to foster research and new thinking in the field. In recent years, this has meant the inclusion of contemporary art alongside historical investigations. One of the pioneers in these endeavors has been my predecessor, Dr. Vishakha N. Desai, who stepped down from her position as Asia Society President on September 1, 2012, after a distinguished tenure with the society of 22 years, which she began as Director of Asia Society Museum. While at Asia Society, Dr. Desai published, edited, or contributed to numerous books as well as many articles on traditional and contemporary art. Among the exhibitions for which she received the most praise is Gods, Guardians, and Lovers: Temple Sculptures from North India, A.D. 700–1200, co-curated with Darielle Mason in 1993. Dr. Desai is also well known for commissioning large-scale contemporary art exhibitions in the 1990s, including Asia/America: Identities in Contemporary Asian American Art (1994), Contemporary Art in Asia: Traditions/Tensions (1996), and Inside Out: New Chinese Art (1998), each groundbreaking in its own right. In 2012, she oversaw the inauguration of two major architectural projects for Asia Society centers in Hong Kong and Houston, Texas. Both new buildings include gallery spaces for exhibitions of Asian art. The field of Asian art scholarship has undergone many changes in the past decade, with new archaeological discoveries, the museum boom in Asia that has seen fast-paced collection formation, and the emergence of an appreciation for contemporary art. Asia Society responds to these changes in different ways. Our fall 2014 exhibition in New York focuses on a Korean American artist and his vision of the future through technology such as robotics and computer-generated imagery: Nam June Paik: Becoming Robot. Next spring we present Buddhist Art of Myanmar, the first major American loan exhibition focused on the art and culture of a country largely closed off to the world for decades. Both the exhibition and accompanying scholarly catalogue promise to be significant contributions to our understanding of Myanmar’s culture and Buddhism. In addition to our ongoing plans for exhibitions of traditional, modern, and contemporary art, we are also establishing initiatives designed to respond to the changing landscape of Asian art. Through the formation of the Asia Arts and Museum Network, Asia Society will convene museum professionals from Asia, North America, and Europe for face-to-face discussions to identify and navigate the challenges and opportunities developing in the new museum ecology of Asia. This takes the form of a large-scale annual Arts & Museum Summit at Asia Society Hong Kong Center, which is open to scholars and museum professionals, and the U.S.-China Museum Leaders Forum, which allows American museum professionals and their Chinese counterparts to meet and connect on a personal level to develop shared projects. Following the Chinese government’s announcement that they will build thousands of new museums in the next decade, there is a great and urgent demand in China to exchange knowledge and best practices with their North American peers. Archives of Asian Art plays an important role in bringing to light new thinking on Asian art through research. It remains as important as ever to hear from art historians—their areas of research, theories, challenges to historical preconceptions, and ways of connecting the past to the present. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
亚洲协会致力于出版有关亚洲艺术的学术著作,至今已有半个多世纪的历史。亚洲艺术档案的延续是我们在该领域促进研究和新思维的努力之一。近年来,这意味着将当代艺术纳入历史调查。这些努力的先驱之一是我的前任维沙卡·n·德赛博士,她于2012年9月1日辞去亚洲协会主席一职,她在亚洲协会担任了22年的杰出任期,开始担任亚洲协会博物馆馆长。在亚洲协会工作期间,德赛博士出版、编辑或参与撰写了大量关于传统和当代艺术的书籍和文章。她在1993年与达里尔·梅森(Darielle Mason)共同策划的展览“神、守护者和恋人:北印度寺庙雕塑,公元700-1200年”中获得了最多的赞誉。德赛博士还因在20世纪90年代委托举办大型当代艺术展览而闻名,其中包括“亚洲/美国:当代亚裔美国艺术的身份”(1994年)、“亚洲当代艺术:传统/紧张”(1996年)和“Inside Out: New Chinese art”(1998年),每一次展览都具有开创性。2012年,她主持了亚洲协会(Asia Society)在香港和德克萨斯州休斯顿的两个大型建筑项目的落成典礼。两座新建筑都包括亚洲艺术展览的画廊空间。在过去的十年里,亚洲艺术研究领域经历了许多变化,有新的考古发现,亚洲博物馆的蓬勃发展带来了快节奏的藏品形成,以及对当代艺术的欣赏。亚洲协会以不同的方式应对这些变化。我们在纽约举办的2014年秋季展览聚焦于一位韩裔美国艺术家,以及他通过机器人技术和计算机生成图像等技术对未来的展望:白南准:成为机器人。明年春天,我们将举办“缅甸佛教艺术”(Buddhist Art of Myanmar)展览,这是美国首次以一个几十年来基本上与世界隔绝的国家的艺术和文化为重点的大型出借展览。展览和随附的学术目录都有望为我们了解缅甸文化和佛教做出重大贡献。除了我们正在进行的传统、现代和当代艺术展览计划外,我们还建立了旨在应对亚洲艺术不断变化的倡议。通过成立亚洲艺术与博物馆网络,亚洲协会将召集来自亚洲、北美和欧洲的博物馆专业人士进行面对面的讨论,以确定和应对亚洲新博物馆生态中发展的挑战和机遇。这包括在亚洲协会香港中心举办的大型年度艺术与博物馆峰会(art & Museum Summit)和美中博物馆领袖论坛(U.S.-China Museum Leaders Forum),前者对学者和博物馆专业人士开放,后者允许美国博物馆专业人士和中国同行会面并在个人层面上建立联系,共同开发项目。在中国政府宣布将在未来十年内新建数千家博物馆之后,中国迫切需要与北美同行交流知识和最佳实践。亚洲艺术档案在通过研究揭示亚洲艺术新思维方面发挥着重要作用。听取艺术史学家的意见一如既往地重要——他们的研究领域、理论、对历史先入之见的挑战,以及将过去与现在联系起来的方式。档案馆是为数不多的进行此类讨论的论坛之一。
Asia Society’s commitment to publishing scholarship on Asian art now has a history of more than half a century. The continuation of Archives of Asian Art has been one of our efforts to foster research and new thinking in the field. In recent years, this has meant the inclusion of contemporary art alongside historical investigations. One of the pioneers in these endeavors has been my predecessor, Dr. Vishakha N. Desai, who stepped down from her position as Asia Society President on September 1, 2012, after a distinguished tenure with the society of 22 years, which she began as Director of Asia Society Museum. While at Asia Society, Dr. Desai published, edited, or contributed to numerous books as well as many articles on traditional and contemporary art. Among the exhibitions for which she received the most praise is Gods, Guardians, and Lovers: Temple Sculptures from North India, A.D. 700–1200, co-curated with Darielle Mason in 1993. Dr. Desai is also well known for commissioning large-scale contemporary art exhibitions in the 1990s, including Asia/America: Identities in Contemporary Asian American Art (1994), Contemporary Art in Asia: Traditions/Tensions (1996), and Inside Out: New Chinese Art (1998), each groundbreaking in its own right. In 2012, she oversaw the inauguration of two major architectural projects for Asia Society centers in Hong Kong and Houston, Texas. Both new buildings include gallery spaces for exhibitions of Asian art. The field of Asian art scholarship has undergone many changes in the past decade, with new archaeological discoveries, the museum boom in Asia that has seen fast-paced collection formation, and the emergence of an appreciation for contemporary art. Asia Society responds to these changes in different ways. Our fall 2014 exhibition in New York focuses on a Korean American artist and his vision of the future through technology such as robotics and computer-generated imagery: Nam June Paik: Becoming Robot. Next spring we present Buddhist Art of Myanmar, the first major American loan exhibition focused on the art and culture of a country largely closed off to the world for decades. Both the exhibition and accompanying scholarly catalogue promise to be significant contributions to our understanding of Myanmar’s culture and Buddhism. In addition to our ongoing plans for exhibitions of traditional, modern, and contemporary art, we are also establishing initiatives designed to respond to the changing landscape of Asian art. Through the formation of the Asia Arts and Museum Network, Asia Society will convene museum professionals from Asia, North America, and Europe for face-to-face discussions to identify and navigate the challenges and opportunities developing in the new museum ecology of Asia. This takes the form of a large-scale annual Arts & Museum Summit at Asia Society Hong Kong Center, which is open to scholars and museum professionals, and the U.S.-China Museum Leaders Forum, which allows American museum professionals and their Chinese counterparts to meet and connect on a personal level to develop shared projects. Following the Chinese government’s announcement that they will build thousands of new museums in the next decade, there is a great and urgent demand in China to exchange knowledge and best practices with their North American peers. Archives of Asian Art plays an important role in bringing to light new thinking on Asian art through research. It remains as important as ever to hear from art historians—their areas of research, theories, challenges to historical preconceptions, and ways of connecting the past to the present. Archives is one of the few forums for such discussions.
期刊介绍:
Since its establishment in 1945, Archives of Asian Art has been devoted to publishing new scholarship on the art and architecture of South, Southeast, Central, and East Asia. Articles discuss premodern and contemporary visual arts, archaeology, architecture, and the history of collecting. To maintain a balanced representation of regions and types of art and to present a variety of scholarly perspectives, the editors encourage submissions in all areas of study related to Asian art and architecture. Every issue is fully illustrated (with color plates in the online version), and each fall issue includes an illustrated compendium of recent acquisitions of Asian art by leading museums and collections. Archives of Asian Art is a publication of Asia Society.