Vaginal Calligraphy Artist in Brush With Government Association
Controversial artist Sun Ping squeezed out from prestigious China Artists Association over ‘vulgar’ performance art.
By Owen Churchill
China’s official association for artists has taken action against the creator of a performance art video that depicts a woman painting traditional calligraphy using her vagina to wield the brush.
On its official account on messaging app WeChat, the government-led China Artists Association announced Tuesday that Sun Ping — otherwise known as member 3685 — was to have his membership revoked.
The statement said the style of artwork, which has come to be known as “sexual calligraphy,” had an “adverse effect” on society and inflicted “considerable damage” to the association's reputation. It added that the association shared the public’s unanimous disdain for the “vulgar” work, which it described as having “wantonly defiled calligraphy and trampled over civilization.”
The avant-garde artist’s best-known example of this kind of “sexual calligraphy” is “Unknown Tao,” a 2006 multimedia representation of a woman using a calligraphy brush held in her vagina to write characters from traditional Chinese texts. Photographs and video of the performance show a half-naked woman squatting over large stretches of paper, a calligraphy brush hanging down between her legs.
Sun, who comes from China’s northeastern province of Heilongjiang and has had art displayed in China and the U.K., had been a member of the association since 1985. The 63-year-old has been producing sexual calligraphy for some time, but the association cited his ongoing promotion of the work both within China and abroad as cause for the disciplinary action.
Sun could not be reached for comment on his expulsion, but in previous media interviews he has acknowledged the divisiveness of his work. “I don’t know if I’m still an artist because pretty much all my works have been controversial in China,” he told Global Times in a 2010 interview.
“People who look at [Unknown Tao] with a perspective that is merely sexual, will immediately criticize and thus miss its deeper meaning and message,” Sun told Global Times, alluding to his intention to use the artwork to highlight the injustice of a society that glorifies tradition and art yet disregards the plight of sex workers.
A woman writes Chinese characters with a brush held in her vagina as part of Sun Ping’s ‘sexual calligraphy’ work. From Sun Ping’s microblogging Weibo account.
According to a spokesperson from the membership department of the China Artists Association, the organization prefers to take a hands-off approach with its artists and does not oppose the creation of work with sexual themes. “We don’t have rules that limit the creativity of artists — the artists are free,” she told Sixth Tone under condition of anonymity.
The spokesperson pointed to the association’s constitution, which, while not expressly stipulating against the creation of work with sexual themes, does say that the organization strives to “raise the ideological and moral quality of the artist community.”
“Sun Ping has just had too adverse an effect on the art world,” the association’s spokesperson told Sixth Tone, adding that the decision to ban the artist came after an internet user reported him to the association.
Lan Qingwei, an art critic and the director of the Chengdu Museum of Contemporary Art, told Sixth Tone that Sun Ping is not alone in China in his exploration of nudity through performance art. But what makes him unusual, said Lan, is that there is essentially no one else using sex organs in artistic expression.
The China Artists Association’s decision to expel Sun does not necessarily signify growing conservatism within China’s art world, Lan believes. “The association does not represent artistic standards,” he said. “If you are expelled, it doesn’t mean that you lose the right to produce art.”
Reactions on microblogging platform Weibo seem to suggest that the association was correct in its assertion that many people treat Sun’s artwork with disdain. “Calligraphy is one of Chinese culture’s most quintessential treasures,” said one user, echoing the sentiment of many other commenters. “It shouldn’t be ruined or used for entertainment.”
Along with those who criticized Sun’s work, there were a small minority who saw the humorous side of things, however. “What sophistication,” said one user. In Chinese, the word for sophistication, bige, contains a character that is vulgar slang for vagina.
The association’s spokesperson said the China Artists Association would not rule out letting Sun rejoin. “It would depend on his future output,” she told Sixth Tone. “We do accept second applications.”
Additional reporting by Li You.
(Header image: Modified brushes used in Sun Ping’s ‘sexual calligraphy’ work. From Sun Ping’s Weibo account.)