Big Tail Elephant
Big Tail Elephant was a media art collective from the Guangzhou, China. Consisting of artists Chen Shaoxiong, Liang Juhui, Lin Yilin, and Xu Tan, the group was most active in the 1990s.[1][2] According to some accounts, they ceased to operate collectively after 1998.[2]
At the time the group operated, the centers for contemporary art in China were Beijing and Shanghai, not the Pearl River Delta area, where the artists lived.[3] Responding in part to the rapid urban development of Southern China following economic growth, the collective organized a series of guerrilla exhibitions in transient or abandoned urban spaces.[4][5][6] According to Swiss curator and Art Historian Bernhard Fibicher "The tremendous upheaval in China, reflecting the culture shock provoked by Deng Xiaoping’s reforms, represents the core theme for this group’s artistic projects. Their work deals with the cultural, intellectual, social and political schisms in present day China... Above all, the group seeks to instill confusion between the public and private realms, to doctor "normal" size ratios, and to correlate art with life. In other words, to use all possible means (but preferably those with which we are most familiar) for purposes of destabilization."[7]
They were part of a wave of artists responding to economic and cultural changes in the Pearl River Delta region, including such as Cao Fei.[8][9][10][11] Artist Xu Tan articulated that the group believed in channeling their political and economic critiques into a more local system of art, using savings from other work to create their exhibitions.[12]
Curator Barbara London, who led early video acquisitions at the Museum of Modern Art, included the group in her chronology of the first 50 years of video art.[13][14]
References
- ^ "MAAP - Media Art Asia Pacific Chen Shaoxiong". Multimedia Art Asia Pacific.
- ^ a b "Big Tail Elephant : Build and Resist - les presses du réel (Book)".
- ^ "Then and Now". ArtAsiaPacific. 2018. ISSN 1039-3625.
- ^ "Big Tail Elephants: One Hour, No Room, Five Shows - Announcements". E-flux. 2017-03-20.
- ^ https://yishu-online.com/wp-content/uploads/mm-products/uploads/2003_v02_02_lin_y_p022.pdf
- ^ "Interventions in the Greater Bay: Reconstructing the Archives of Big Tail Elepha". Art Basel.
- ^ Big-Tail Elephant. Bern: Kunsthalle Bern, 1998.
- ^ "Made in the PRD: Video Art Tales from China's Subtropical Urban Sprawl". February 2019.
- ^ Cinema at the City's Edge: Film and Urban Networks in East Asia. Hong Kong University Press. 2010. ISBN 978-962-209-983-8.
- ^ "Epilogue: 'My Future is Not a Dream': Shifting Worlds of Contemporary Asian Art and Exhibitions 'My Future is Not a Dream': Shifting Worlds of Contemporary Asian Art and Exhibitions from Contemporary Asian Art and Exhibitions: Connectivities and World-making on JSTOR". www.jstor.org. Retrieved 2026-03-14.
- ^ "Cao Fei". November 2024.
- ^ Nikita Yingqian Cai. 2015. “The Paradoxes of Autonomy: A Site of Critique.” Yishu: Journal of Contemporary Chinese Art 14 (2): 28–36.
- ^ London, Barbara (2020). Video art: the first fifty years. London [England] ; New York, NY: Phaidon Press Limited. ISBN 9780714877594.
- ^ London, Barbara (2001). "Digital Art Takes Shape at MoMA". Leonardo. 34 (2): 95–99. ISSN 0024-094X.