
April 19 – May 28, 2004
Lillian Vernon Center
for International Affairs
58 West 10th Street, NYC
212/992-9091
Gallery Hours:
Mondays – Fridays: 10 am – 5 pm
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Reprising his Chinese Paintings series of
1974–79, Errós lithographic portfolio Mao’s Last Visit to Venice,
issued in 2003, combines Socialist Realism—the idealized, propagand-ist
mode favored by the Communist Chinese and Soviet governments—with sunny,
picturesque views of Western urban settings culled from postcards,
posters, and travel brochures. In the lithographs, hyper-realistic
depictions of Mao Zedong and his followers share space with images of the
Italian city’s famous piazzas and monuments. Are the triumphant Communists
conquering “La Serenissima,” or are they merely tourists, taking in Piazza
San Marco and the Grand Canal, and scouting for souvenirs?
In Mao’s Last Visit to Venice, Erró
adeptly exposes the visual similarities between highly idealized,
tourist-postcard city-scapes and Socialist Realist art, despite their
obvious ideo-logical differences. In juxtaposing the two, he reveals both
national and theoretical borders to be permeable. As Mao’s Last Visit
to Venice reminds us, political and cultural differences between East
and West, while constantly declared, are sometimes difficult to sustain.
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