Asian Studies (Dec 2011)

Parodying Mao’s Image: Caricaturing in Contemporary Chinese Art

  • Minna Valjakka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4312/as.2011.-15.1.87-114
Journal volume & issue
Vol. -15, no. 1

Abstract

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Although Chinese contemporary artists are often criticized for creating superficial works that parody Chairman Mao without any deeper meaning, the employment of parody is a far more complex phenomenon. Instead of being representatives of Jamesonian pastiche, many artists employ varying methods of trans-contextual parody to express their mixed and even controversial intentions and notions. With a detailed structural analysis of the art works, and taking into account the socio-cultural context and the artists’ own intentions, I will show that the common assumptions—that parodying Mao is equivalent to political pop or that political pop represents pastiche—are oversimplifications of this complex phenomenon, especially when caricaturing is used as a method to violate the visual norms.

Keywords