Recollecting memories of China’s first world’s fair

Location

Lingnan University / Online Session via Zoom

Start Date

20-5-2021 10:10 AM

End Date

20-5-2021 11:40 AM

Description

This paper investigates illustrated magazines and commemorative books as sites of historical narratives and collective memories of exhibiting cultures. It focuses on the 1910 Nanking Industrial Exposition ─ the first and last world's fair held by the Qing dynasty (1644-1912). This large-scale industrial fair was intended to modernize China by promoting industry and commerce, and offering international and provincial pavilions, as well as buildings for artistic, educational, and foreign exhibits. However, the fair has largely been forgotten or devalued in the history of Chinese art and exhibitions in the 20th century. The 1910 Nanking Industrial Exposition referenced the 1903 Osaka Fifth National Industrial Exhibition, but it also reflected the popularity of world's fairs beginning in the late 19th century and the establishment of modern nation-states, as well as the wider production, reproduction, and circulation of press coverage and visual culture. I argue that these visual narratives served as framing devices for recollecting shared experiences of this historic fair through photographs of people, buildings, and events. These visual narratives intervene in our knowledge of world's fairs and industrial fairs, and help to shape collective memory surrounding exhibition culture in the Chinese and Japanese contexts. Special emphasis is placed on the role of visual culture and the public sphere in unifying disparate and competing memories.

Recommended Citation

Chen, F. F. (2021, May). Recollecting memories of China’s first world’s fair. Presented at Then and Now: Collecting Art and Exhibiting Cultures in Asia Conference, Lingnan University, Hong Kong.

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May 20th, 10:10 AM May 20th, 11:40 AM

Recollecting memories of China’s first world’s fair

Lingnan University / Online Session via Zoom

This paper investigates illustrated magazines and commemorative books as sites of historical narratives and collective memories of exhibiting cultures. It focuses on the 1910 Nanking Industrial Exposition ─ the first and last world's fair held by the Qing dynasty (1644-1912). This large-scale industrial fair was intended to modernize China by promoting industry and commerce, and offering international and provincial pavilions, as well as buildings for artistic, educational, and foreign exhibits. However, the fair has largely been forgotten or devalued in the history of Chinese art and exhibitions in the 20th century. The 1910 Nanking Industrial Exposition referenced the 1903 Osaka Fifth National Industrial Exhibition, but it also reflected the popularity of world's fairs beginning in the late 19th century and the establishment of modern nation-states, as well as the wider production, reproduction, and circulation of press coverage and visual culture. I argue that these visual narratives served as framing devices for recollecting shared experiences of this historic fair through photographs of people, buildings, and events. These visual narratives intervene in our knowledge of world's fairs and industrial fairs, and help to shape collective memory surrounding exhibition culture in the Chinese and Japanese contexts. Special emphasis is placed on the role of visual culture and the public sphere in unifying disparate and competing memories.