Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of multi-block woodcut print; oil-based ink on paper.

My New Book (我的新书)

1998

Xu Bing 徐冰 Chinese, born 1955

China

Woodblock printing on paper emerged in China around the seventh century as a way to preserve and copy Buddhist texts. Since that time, printmakers in East Asia have refined the technique by experimenting with color, size, and ways of bringing the ink and paper into contact with the block.

Today, Chinese artists employ this time-honored medium to depict everything from landscapes to abstract forms. They also use different types of pigments to create varying degrees of opacity. This work comes from a portfolio that was commissioned in 1999 by the Muban Foundation in London to recognize the achievements of Chinese printmakers. This work demonstrates the woodblock print’s potential to connect the visual worlds of traditional and contemporary China.

Multi-block woodcut print; oil-based ink on paper

Arts of Asia