BEIJINGWang
Wenhai, the 53-year-old self-proclaimed Yanan Clay Sculpture King, has three
goals. First, he wants to build a 426-foot-tall statue of Mao Zedong in Yanan,
the Chinese Communist Party's historic revolutionary base in the northwest. Then
he wants to make a giant memorial commemorating Mao's philosophies, with
possibly a nod to Karl Marx. Finally, if he has time, he wants to carve 25,000
tiny statues of Mao to leave along the route of the Long March, the 6,000-mile
trek that members of the fledgling Communist Party made in the mid-1930s.
.
"If everyone were like Mao," said Wang,
who has been making Mao sculptures for three decades, "the world would be
beautiful."
.
Of course not everyone thinks so highly
of Mao, who led the Communists to victory in 1949. Even Deng Xiaoping, Mao's
most prominent successor, signed off on a judgment that Mao had made "gross
mistakes."
.
But for Lu Jie, the curator of a huge
contemporary art project - "The Long March: A Walking Visual Display," shown in
Beijing and remote parts of western China - letting people make up their own
minds is exactly the point.
.
"We need to open a space to think about
art, culture and history," he said. "Criticism is very important." He said that
he spent a lot of his own money to put on the show and also received donations
from Chinese and foreigners. The artists, including Wang, are contributing their
works and time.
.
Lu said he chose the 9,600-kilometer Long
March as a theme because no moment in modern Chinese history was loaded with
more patriotic symbolism.
.
In 1934 Mao and his followers fled their
rural bases in southern China as the Nationalist army closed around them. During
the next year they scaled mountains, forded rivers and crossed empty plains to
reach Yanan in Shaanxi Province. The journey was so arduous that perhaps only a
tenth of Mao's original force of 100,000 reached the new sanctuary.
.
Less simple, though, are the layers of
propaganda that the government has heaped on the journey. Hundreds of
nationalistic films and documentaries have been made about it, and every year
students retrace parts of the route. "It has become very heroic and romantic,"
Lu said. "But people need to find their own interpretations."
.
Despite a slow cultural opening, Chinese
academics are still forbidden to teach about many historical events and such
public testaments are rare.
.
By bringing contemporary artwork by about
250 artists, some Chinese and some foreign, to 20 sites - mostly backwater towns
along the Long March route - Lu hopes to help that happen.
.
The project's exhibition had visited a
dozen sites before pausing in September for a series of shows, including one
with Wang's statues of Mao in a tiny Beijing gallery. In Zunyi, a town where Mao
wrestled control of the party, the Beijing performance artist Wang Chuyu had
volunteers read from the Chinese Constitution.
.
The work of Wang Wenhai, who was born to
poor farmers in central China, also deals in memory. Despite witnessing scores
of neighbors starve during the widespread famine that followed the government's
forced collectivization of farms in the late 1950s, he became an ardent Mao
follower during the Cultural Revolution. "In 1966 I became a Red Guard," he
said. "I studied Mao. I carried out the revolution."
.
Wang had a perfectly proletariat
background, and in 1970 he was sent to Yanan to work as a tour guide at a museum
celebrating the party. There he met an artist who taught him sculpture, and he
quickly applied the craft to glorifying Mao. On the back of many of his works he
still inscribes the Cultural Revolution-era phrase, "Mao is the red sun in our
hearts!" But unlike most Chinese, many of whom suffered under Mao, Wang did not
discard his fanaticism after Mao died in 1976.
.
"Wang loves Mao," Lu, the curator, said.
"He's totally devoted to his art."
.
Lu said he hoped to take works and
documentation of his project abroad. Several pieces will be exhibited at a
biennale in Taipei in October. For the large shows, he said, he will take
several of Wang's statues.
.
Wang said he needed the money to build
the world's biggest Mao statue, to tower over Yanan at 130 meters.