Shedding light on storehouse secrets
The museum is located in Hubei's provincial capital Wuhan, an industrial giant in Central China.
"The city's positioning decides our collection with prints featuring the theme of industrial development," museum director Fu Zhongwang says.
"Most print artists were themselves workers, who drew inspiration from laboring in workshops, construction sites and mines."
The exhibition inaugurates NAMOC's series of celebrations of its 50th anniversary. The country's top art museum houses more than 100,000 paintings, sculptures, calligraphic works, photos and folk art items, such as paper-cuts and puppets. Director Fan Di'an says the museum received a donation of 1,200 works in 2012 alone.
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Such a tour to the capital might spark interest in regional art traditions and bring donations for local museums.
The Guan Shanyue Art Museum in Guangdong's Shenzhen city exhibits selected posters from a collection of 1,160 graphic designs from home and abroad. That accounts for nearly one-third of its collection.
The museum, which is named after the Lingnan School's pioneer artist Guan Shanyue (1912-2000), also hopes to enlarge its stock of Chinese paintings, particularly of contemporary ink-and-water works.
Museum curator Chen Xiangbo says the recent years' art market boom has elevated this genre's appeal. He believes it will take time for more buyers to share their private collections with the public.
"China's fine art museums are still in their infancy," Central Academy of Fine Arts professor Jin Shangyi says.
"They need to move forward by staging permanent exhibitions where collections can enthrall viewers rather than remain storehouse secrets."
He called upon the academy's teachers to donate about 100 works to museums in the 1990s.
The CAFA Art Museum displays at the exhibition works celebrated artists created when they studied or taught at the academy in their youth.
The Ministry of Culture launched a campaign in 2012 to select public art museums' best collection exhibitions. It encourages more permanent shows to make collections more accessible.
"If we (art museums) only collect things but don't display them, we're merely warehouses - and who'd want to donate to our storage?" Fan says.
The exhibition will run until Feb 26.
linqi@chinadaily.com.cn