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For Immediate Release
An Artist's Role in Opening Up China to the World
The opening up of The People's Republic of China to the degree where
it has welcomed the world inside its borders for the 29th Olympiad--hardly
conceivable a scant thirty years ago--has occurred in small, incremental steps,
beginning with the ping-pong diplomacy days of President Richard Nixon. In
addition to sports, art has been instrumental in this increase of freedoms
within China. Perhaps two important small steps toward China's increasing
freedoms that have occurred along the way were the historic 1986 Edna Hibel art
exhibitions in Beijing's China National Art Gallery, and Chongqing's Sichuan
Institute of Fine Arts. These were the first exhibitions by a foreign woman in
China.
Here is a brief history of what occurred in the aftermath of Edna
Hibel's exhibitions in China, both of which were endorsed by then-Vice President
George H.W. Bush, and then-Chinese Ambassador to the U.S.A., the Honorable Han
Xu. (Other official endorsements came from then-Florida Governor Bob Graham, the
then-American Ambassador to China, Winston Lord, along with officials from
important American art institutions, such as the National Gallery of Art, the
National Museum of Women in the Arts, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.)
The Beijing opening of Hibel's exhibition was seen by many millions
of Chinese on television. During the broadcast, the host said, "Hibel's
beautiful art touched the hearts of the Chinese people." Several viewers from
outlying provinces reported that they had sold their bicycles--their only mode
of transportation--in order to travel to Beijing to view the Hibel exhibition.
Upon the conclusion of these historic Sino-American art exhibitions
in 1986, China's Consul General to the U.S.A., Ni Yaoli, proclaimed to a large
audience, "Edna Hibel has built a golden bridge between our two nations."
Immediately, another exhibition invitation was extended to Edna Hibel by the
Chinese government.
As an example of this "golden bridge," one of the paintings in
Hibel's groundbreaking 50-year retrospective exhibitions in 1986 in China was a
portrait of one of her classmates, Winnie Cheng, who returned to her native
China shortly after the painting was completed in 1936. Winnie and Edna
corresponded, but lost touch with each other after the start of WWII. As a
result of the exhibition, however, a photograph of the Winnie Cheng painting
appeared in a Shanghai newspaper.
Consequently, Winnie's son and grandson were found to be living in
the U.S., and a tearful meeting was arranged where Edna learned that Winnie and
her husband had died shortly after the end of the Cultural Revolution. Edna then
created a drawing of Winnie's grandson, William, which was slated to be used as
a poster in "A Golden Bridge," the forthcoming Hibel exhibition scheduled for
September, 1989, in Beijing. Unfortunately, the Tiananmen Square incident
intervened and that second Hibel exhibition in China did not take place. # # #
Contact for interviews and photography: Andy Plotkin, Ph.D. (561) 848-9633.
Media personnel may find out more information about Edna Hibel by visiting
www.hibel.com/presskit.htm.
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