 300 pp. September 2004
cloth, ISBN 978-0-8248-2764-9, $47.00
|
Keywords: |
Asia China art history |
|
Selling Happiness: Calendar Posters and Visual Culture in Early-Twentieth-Century Shanghai
by Ellen Johnston Laing
“This is a terrific addition to the small but quickly growing body of scholarship on the development of popular material culture, commerical art, visual culture, pictorial advertising and consumerism in the first half of the twentieth century. . . . Lavishly illustrated with both color and black-and-white reproductions. ” —The China Journal 56 (2006)
“A timely and essential contribution. . . . This book significantly advances our understanding of the visual practices of twentieth-century China.” —Journal of Asian Studies, May 2006
“Splendid . . . beautifully produced.” —The China Quarterly, 2005
“A useful book and a valuable contribution.” —Asian Affairs, June 2005
From the early twentieth century until the Communist takeover in 1949, Shanghai commercial artists created thousands of colorful posters and black and white advertisements that formed an essential part of modern life in the city. This visually appealing and richly illustrated work describes the origin and evolution of modern commercial art in China, focusing on colorful advertisement calendar posters that featured distinctive feminine images. It makes clear how essential commercial art and its institutional backing were to the development of modern art and even modern society in China over the past century. Selling Happiness discusses not only advertising art but also the production and marketing of the calendar poster. These posters, like other advertisements, were rendered in a Western realistic technique and were wildly and widely popular. Ordinary people throughout China often acquired them to decorate their homes. Laing outlines how the Chinese commercial artist, who rarely attended formal Western art classes, gained skills in Western representational art. In the final chapter of the book, she explains how the styles developed by the commercial poster artists during the 1920s and 1930s became the basis for certain types of propaganda art under the Chinese Communists in the 1950s and 1960s. 149 illus., 37 color
Ellen Johnston Laing is research associate at the Center for Chinese Studies, University of Michigan.
Read the introduction (PDF).
|