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Distributed for Hong Kong University Press

Surrealism from Paris to Shanghai

Surrealism through the lens of China.

Surrealism from Paris to Shanghai is the first English language book dedicated to introducing Chinese Surrealism, enlarging the geographical authority of Surrealist studies beyond a Eurocentric prism of analysis. The book reveals the mutual cultural influence between China and the Western avant-garde, moving beyond notions of “copying from the West.” Utilizing primary source materials, particularly periodicals, Lauren Walden reveals the underexplored dissemination of Surrealism in Shanghai. Highlighting how Surrealism was applied across a broad political spectrum in Shanghai including anti-colonialism, communism, and nationalism, Walden also demonstrates why Shanghai’s former French concession became the birthplace of Surrealism in China.

152 pages | 34 halftones | 5 x 7 | © 2024

Art: European Art, Middle Eastern, African, and Asian Art

History: Asian History


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Table of Contents

Acknowledgements . vi
Introduction 1
Pang Xunqin and the Storm Society . 24
The Storm Society . 47
The Chinese Independent Art Association 64
Chinese Interpretations of European Surrealist
Works 80
Xiandai [Les Contemporains]: All Surrealism
under Heaven . 89
Surrealist Photography in Shanghai: Shidai
Manhua [Modern Sketch] . 97
Surrealist Photography in Shanghai: Lang
Jingshan (1892–1995) . 105
Conclusion . 125
Appendix I: The Storm Society Manifesto
(1932) . 131
Appendix II: Manifesto of the Chinese
Independent Art Association (1935) 134
Appendix III: Biographies . 136

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