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Welcome to people's architecture October update! In this issue we will give you an overview on select activities, exhibitions, and contemporary events in China, as well as related people's architecture activities. For further information please contact us.

 

__________________________________ PEOPLE'S EXHIBITIONS

 

 

 

 

 

SHCONTEMPORARY ART FAIR
SHANGHAI EXHIBITION CENTER

Last month, ArtAsiaPacific and people's architecture presented BUILDING ASIA BRICK BY BRICK at the ShContemporary Art Fair at the Shanghai Exhibition Center. Please visit the BABB blog for more commentary on the event.

 
ASIAN CONTEMPORARY ART FAIR

PIER 92 | NEW YORK CITY
NOVEMBER 8 - 12, 2007

ArtAsiaPacific and people's architecture will be presenting BUILDING ASIA BRICK BY BRICK at the first annual ASIA CONTEMPORARY ART FAIR exhibtion in New York. Please visit ArtAsiaPacific at our booth at ACAFNY. More info >>
 

 

____________________________________ CHINA CONFERENCE

 

 

 

 

 

CHINA : NEXT
AN ARCHITECTURAL RECORD CHINA EVENT

CHARTRES GARDEN | NO. 268, FUXING WEST RD. | SHANGHAI
OCTOBER 30, 2007

What's driving the next generation of design in China? Organized by Architecture Record, part of McGraw-Hill Construction, the world's leading construction information & media service provider, CHINA : NEXT is a one-day symposium that will bring together a multi-disciplinary group of architects, designers, artists, filmmakers, planners, and critics. More than 15 distinguished architects from around the world will speak at the event.

Panel discussions will explore the following ideas and strategies shaping the future of China's architecture, art, and urbanism:
NOSTALGIA. How contemporary architects in China are using/misusing history and memory.
MONEY. How the booming economy is driving/distorting design today.
ART. How architects are learning from/being led astray by ideas from other fields of art.
SOCIAL JUSTICE. How architects and planners are engaging/ignoring people of different socio-economic groups in their designs.

Please click the following link for more info >>
 

 

________________________________________ CHINA GLOBAL

 

 

 

 


CHINAPRODUCTION
ARCHITEKTURZENTRUM WIEN | VIENNA | AUSTRIA
OCTOBER 25, 2007 - JANUARY 21, 2008 

Under the title "Chinaproduction" the exhibition presented in the Az W reflects the current international debate about contemporary architecture in China that is developing from a Maoist-communist state to a political and economic superpower with Western tendencies.

For the Western international architecture business China has become the most desirable place to build. Prestigious buildings by star architects function as emblems of contemporary Chinese identity. They are intended to symbolise a modernised open China, which, it is often now maintained, is more Western than the West. Peking for example, which is to be converted into the metropolis of the "global players", offers a setting for "hypermodernity". Traditional and historic structures fall victim to this modernisation that in some cases involves the destruction of entire areas.

The current discussion about the breath-taking urban transformation as well as reflections upon the changes to the profession of architect in the context of China's transformation will be presented in the Az W in the form of a documentation organised as a history of reception through the media. More info >> [DE / EN]


MADE IN CHINA : CONTEMPORARY CHINESE ART AT THE ISRAEL MUSEUM

THE ISRAEL MUSEUM | JERUSALEM | ISRAEL
SEPTEMBER 18, 2007 - MARCH 1, 2008

Comprising painting, sculpture, photography, installation, video, and works on paper, the exhibition offers an insight into the many currents that are energizing Chinese art today and provides an introduction to a visual culture that is making its way, at lightning speed, to a prominent position on the international art scene. And just as contemporary art from China has recently attracted great interest in the West, Chinese artists have been making skillful use of media, techniques, and forms of expression that were developed outside their country. At the same time, specifically Chinese roots - pre-modern tradition on the one hand, and the Socialist Realism prescribed by the Communist Party until the late 1970s on the other - are still evident in many of the artists' works. Classical subjects such as landscape painting have given rise to contemporary images of nature that differ from those we know in other cultures. A technique rich in tradition, like ink-wash painting, is introduced into experimental and challenging frameworks, so that today Chinese characters are drawn on the human body and the calligraphic symbol is developed into a pure abstraction. More info >>
 

 

_______________________________________ CHINA CURRENT

 

 

 

 

 

CHINA'S RURAL INTERNET GROWTH

Numerous articles have cropped up over the past few weeks regarding rural Internet growth in China, and an overall increase in Chinese Internet users in general. Away from pure data and societal commentary, some of these articles are also tinged with an undercurrent that these numbers point to the potential for new markets. In contrast to the excitement, an article appearing in China Vortex offers some interesting probes and digs into the demographic of Internet cafe users in Beijing and Shanghai, and suggests that reporters move away from the "Wow, China has a lot of people!" analysis of potential Chinese markets. Stripped of all profitability by this commentary, perhaps these spaces can now flourish as crazy heterotopias.

 
WIRELESS BEIJING

In keeping with the Internet topic, Ogilvy's Digital Watch reports that the first phase of the Wi-Fi Beijing project shall be complete by the end of this year. An ambitious plan, the first phase will the Central Business District, Olympic Stadium, and Hotels, and it is intended that Wi-Fi service shall blanket all of Beijing by 2010. For those of us that geek out about this kind of stuff, the wireless service will employ a blended network of WiMAX plus a Wi-Fi mesh-as this may reduce costs when the combining high coverage advantage of WiMAX with the high-volume, small coverage of Wi-Fi.
 

 

____________________________________ SUSTAINABLE CHINA

 

 

 

 


NO-CAR DAY IN KUNMING

While No-Car Day in Beijing and Shanghai received a lukewarm reception, it has taken off in Kunming. Danwei reports, via GoKunming, that Kunming has become the first Chinese city to designate a monthly No-Car Day. Beginning the 27th of October, private cars will be banned from entering the city's ring road between the hours of 9:00 am and 7:00 pm on the fourth Saturday of each month. And lest we forget the numbers, according to municipal government statistics, September's all-country No-Car Day had a significant effect on air quality. Carbon monoxide levels dropped 32.9 percent, nitrogen dioxide levels dropped 45.1 percent, ozone was down 39.5 percent, carbon dioxide was down 15.4 percent and airborne particulate matter was reduced by more than one-fifth.


CHINA'S GREEN BUILDING BINGE

Alex Pasternack, of TreeHugger, provides an insightful editorial into government-level discussions about promoting green building practices in China. More info >>
 

 

__________________________________________ CHINA BLOGS

 

 

 

 

 
CHINESE BLOGGER CONFERENCE 2007

Now open for registration, the Third Chinese Blogger Conference takes place from November 3rd - 4th in Beijing. Last years conference was held in Hangzhou, the year before in Shanghai. This years conference promises to bring more of the excitement of the last two and, to borrow from Danwei, is "highly recommended for anyone interested in grass roots Chinese Internet culture, or meeting entrepreneurs, bloggers and Net freaks". Check the events blog here as the planning unfolds [CN only].


THE WOMEN THAT MAKE YOUR CHILDREN'S TOYS

China makes 70% of the worlds toys, with most of them manufactured in Guangdong province by a predominately female labor force. Shanghaiist (courtesy of China Digital Times and mazm.com) offers up a photo feature of the many women that manufacture these toys.
 

 

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