About this Event
Discover how contemporary Chinese artists respond to history, politics, identity, and everyday life in a rapidly changing world. Presented alongside Forever Tomorrow: Chinese Art Now at Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.
Join us for one lecture or the full series at Central City Library.
Principal lecturer: Meijing He
Saturday 23 May 2026, 10:30 am – 12:00 pm
Lecture 1: History, Politics & Cultural Translation
Chinese contemporary art is dynamic, provocative—and often misunderstood.
How do we begin to read it?
As the first of a three-part lecture series, you are invited to explore how history, politics, and cultural context shape Chinese contemporary art today. We’ll explore how China’s rapid transformation since the Reform and Opening Up period shapes artistic expression—and how politics and cultural context influence what is seen, and what is left unsaid.
Understanding Chinese contemporary art is not only about China—it offers a way to expand how we see, think, and make sense of 21st-century change. In many ways, it reflects a moment of rapid transformation that may point to broader global futures.
Saturday 13 June 2026, 10:30 am – 12:00 pm
Lecture 2: Themes, Symbols & Stories
What stories do artists tell—and how do we read them?
From personal memory to collective history, from everyday life to social commentary, this session explores how artists construct meaning through image, metaphor, and form. We’ll look at how visual languages operate across Chinese contemporary art and how these resonate within different historical and cultural contexts in China.
Together, we build a richer vocabulary for reading how stories are told—and how meaning is shaped through artistic practice.
Saturday 27 June 2026, 10:30 am – 12:00 pm
Lecture 3: Art, Identity & Lived Experience
How do artists navigate identity and artistic practice within complex social and cultural contexts?
This final session considers how lived experience, mobility, and cultural positioning shape contemporary artistic practices across China and its diasporas. We will explore how artists work within shifting expectations, including differing cultural frameworks around expression, responsibility, and interpretation—both within China and in global contexts.
This session invites reflection on how identity is negotiated through art and how context shapes what can be said, shown, and understood.
Meijing He is an arts professional with over 20 years’ experience working across visual, performing, and interdisciplinary practices in China, Hong Kong, and Aotearoa New Zealand. She has held roles with organisations including the British Council, Artspace Aotearoa, and Tātaki Auckland Unlimited, and has been closely involved in developing international art projects, supporting artists, and facilitating cross‑cultural collaborations. Her work focuses on contemporary and experimental art, with a particular interest in how artistic practices engage with shifting social, cultural, and political contexts.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Central City Library, Level 2 Whare Wānanga, 46 Lorne Street, Auckland, New Zealand
NZD 0.00











