A

AIA CES Credits

AV Office

Abstract Publication

Academic Affairs

Academic Calendar, Columbia University

Academic Calendar, GSAPP

Admissions Office

Advanced Standing Waiver Form

Alumni Board

Alumni Office

Architecture Studio Lottery

Assistantships

Avery Library

Avery Review

Avery Shorts

S

STEM Designation

Satisfactory Academic Progress

Scholarships

Skill Trails

Student Affairs

Student Awards

Student Conduct

Student Council (All Programs)

Student Financial Services

Student Health Services at Columbia

Student Organization Handbook

Student Organizations

Student Services Center

Student Services Online (SSOL)

Student Work Online

Studio Culture Policy

Studio Procedures

Summer Workshops

Support GSAPP

Close
This website uses cookies as well as similar tools and technologies to understand visitors' experiences. By continuing to use this website, you consent to Columbia University's usage of cookies and similar technologies, in accordance with the Columbia University Website Cookie Notice Group 6
Cccp tell jingranwang sp26 for political and artistic freedoms

Making Publics: Exhibition Practices and Spatial Politics in Early Reform-Era China

Project by: Jingran Wang (Iris) - @iris_ran327

This paper investigates how public-driven exhibitions in post-1978 China collectively produced alternative public spheres during China’s brief window of political openness between 1978 and 1980. The post-reform era was the most open for public discourse, experimentation, and grassroots cultural practice when compared to both the Maoist years before and the tightening that followed in 1989. After Mao’s death in 1976, China encountered an intense period of political uncertainty known as the Beijing Spring. Deng Xiaoping started his leadership. China launched the policy of Gaige kaifang (改革开放, “Reform and Opening Up”). This time frame marked a transition away from Maoist isolation and Cultural Revolution orthodoxy (1949–1976) toward a mixed socialist-market model. While the state retained strict control over culture and ideology, the late 1970s and 1980s saw the emergence of new spaces for intellectual and artistic experimentation. The shift from revolutionary orthodoxy to reform-era pragmatism created a fragile but significant opening in which citizens, intellectuals, and artists could renegotiate their relationship to political authority. These groups began to manifest their own discursive space through three interconnected acts of spatial appropriation: the Democracy Wall (1978–79) turned a Xidan brick wall into an open-air reading room where citizens gathered to debate handwritten posters; the unofficial journal Today (1978–80) created a portable exhibition space through mimeographed pages passed from reader to reader; and the Stars Art Exhibition (1979) occupied the museum fence as an unauthorized threshold between official art and the street…Emerging in the immediate aftermath of the Cultural Revolution and amid the ideological uncertainty of the Beijing Spring, these movements transformed walls, printed pages, and museum fences into improvised exhibitionary structures through which citizens and artists reasserted visibility, speech, and political subjectivity.