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Monkeys Grasp for the Moon

Asian Art Museum

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    Object Details

    Artist

    Xu Bing (born 1955; active United States)

    Manufacturer

    Smithsonian Institution Office of Exhibitions Central

    Edition/State

    1/2

    Label

    Born in the People's Republic of China, Xu Bing grew up surrounded by books at Beijing University, where his father chaired the history department and his mother worked in the department of library sciences. During the Cultural Revolution, Xu produced revolutionary posters and a village newsletter while working on a communal farm. As a student at the Central Academy of Fine Arts, he employed innovative drawing and woodcut techniques along with his knowledge of artistic fonts and, later, became one of the Academy's youngest faculty members. With his early iconoclastic work, Book From the Sky (1987), Xu emerged as a major figure in the avant-garde (New Wave) art movement in China, as well as the object of harsh government criticism. In 1990, Xu emigrated to the United States where, finding himself in a new and unfamiliar place, he began to consider language and his fascination with words in the context of cultural interactions. Subsequent works, like Square Word Calligraphy Classroom (1996 and ongoing), confirmed his identity as an international artist.
    Based on a Chinese folktale of monkeys who try to reach for the moon, only to discover a vanishing reflection in the water, Monkeys Grasp for the Moon is an installation of word shapes, each one a representation of the word "monkey" rendered in twenty languages and writing systems, including English, Chinese, Japanese, Thai, and Braille. The words resemble monkeys, stretched at beginning and end to form long tails and arms that link together.

    Collection

    National Museum of Asian Art Collection

    Exhibition History

    Xu Bing: Monkeys Grasp for the Moon (November 24, 2004 - March 13, 2020)

    Credit Line

    Purchase — funds provided by the family of Madame Chiang Kai-shek (Chiang Soong Mayling 1898-2003)

    Date

    2001-2004

    Accession Number

    S2004.2.1-21

    Restrictions & Rights

    Usage conditions apply

    Type

    Sculpture

    Medium

    Lacquer on Baltic birch wood

    Dimensions

    H x W x D (overall assembled): 2591.1 x 78 x 4.1 cm (1020 1/8 x 30 11/16 x 1 5/8 in)

    Origin

    China

    Related Online Resources

    Google Arts & Culture

    See more items in

    National Museum of Asian Art

    Data Source

    National Museum of Asian Art

    Topic

    lacquer
    moon
    monkey
    China
    Chinese Art
    Contemporary Art

    Metadata Usage

    Usage conditions apply

    Link to Original Record

    http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ye3f3656562-3854-46e9-8bc1-21873481c1bc

    Record ID

    fsg_S2004.2.1-21
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