Dadaist aspects of Pop art while generally ignoring its possibilities as a form of mass or popular art.
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Five years later, in 1989, the modern art movement in China was repressed by the authorities while economic Reforms continued apace along with the wholesale commercialization of Chinese society. The mass, vulgar, and indeterminate aspects of commercialization had a particular influence on Chinese artists and they naturally came to utilize the language of Pop. In the context of the history of recent Chinese art, the "misreading" of Pop art in 1985 as a form of Dada had a revolutionary significance in China that fueled the trend toward Political Pop in the early 1990s.
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In terms of modern art, China's Political Pop has been deeply influenced by American Pop, in particular the work of Andy Warhol. The differences between the two, however, are that Pop strengthens, even sanctifies popular icons, while Political Pop converts sacred political icons into Pop images. Where American Pop utilized recognized commercial and other icons, Political Pop draws more on the collective cultural memory, in particular those images that are most representative of the revolutionary age like Lenin, Mao, the symbols of the Communist Party, the red star, and so on, mixing these images with contemporary Pop icons.
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This is evident, for example, in Alexander Kosolapov's "Lenin Coca Cola," or Wang Guangyi's "Great Denunciation Series," which combines the Cultural Revolution icons of the Worker, Peasant, and Soldier with commercial symbols such as Coca Cola. Similarly, Zhang Peili's "The Beauty Contest" combines the fireworks of the revolutionary past with the image of body building competitions. The Shanghai artist Yu Youhan has juxtaposed Mao with Whitney Houston, while Qi Zhilong has secreted Mao's image in a color photograph of contemporary stars. A more humorous interpretation of the Mao era is Feng Mengbo's "Endgame,'' where the artist has inserted characters from the Revolutionary Model Operas into a video game scenario, while Geng Jianyi's "Forever Effulgent" replaces the image of Mao familiar from Cultural Revolution propaganda iconography with the Panda and images taken from Chinese money. 7
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Other artists who have engaged in Political Pop create similar substitutions, juxtapositions, or collages. This genre, as in other (now former) socialist countries, is the product of a socialist cultural environment. The erratic nature of social development has meant that a range of cultures and mentalities coexist in the same space and time: the Cultural Revolution, post-Cultural Revolution, peasant society culture, and even postindustrial culture comingle in the China of today. Added to this is the general decay of values, and all these elements combine to create a confusion of cultural memory(ies) and their interrelationship. Tumbled together in the tidal wave
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