Huang Zhuan, influential Chinese curator and art historian, dies at 58
Huang Zhuan, a prominent Chinese curator, critic, author, and art historian, passed away at age 58 after a long battle with cancer, as reported by Art Asia Pacific. His career began in the 1980s as an editor for Meishu Sichao (Art Trends), a key avant-garde journal in China. He later held research and curatorial positions at Shenzhen's He Xiangning Art Museum and served as director of OCAT Shenzhen, playing a crucial role in establishing the OCAT Institute in Beijing, which opened last year. Huang also maintained a teaching role at the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts and authored numerous essays on modern and contemporary Chinese art history, art criticism, and production. His curatorial projects included the inaugural Guangzhou Biennial in 1992, the 3rd Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art in 1999 at Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art in Brisbane, and the first Guangzhou Triennial in 2002.
Key facts
- Huang Zhuan died at age 58
- He had been battling cancer for many years
- He started as an editor for Meishu Sichao (Art Trends) in the 1980s
- He worked at He Xiangning Art Museum in Shenzhen
- He was director of OCAT Shenzhen
- He helped found the OCAT Institute in Beijing, opened last year
- He taught at Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts
- He curated the first Guangzhou Biennial in 1992
Entities
Artists
- Huang Zhuan
Institutions
- Art Asia Pacific
- Meishu Sichao (Art Trends)
- He Xiangning Art Museum
- OCAT Shenzhen
- OCAT Institute
- Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts
- Guangzhou Biennial
- Asia Pacific Triennial of Contemporary Art
- Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art
- Guangzhou Triennial
Locations
- China
- Shenzhen
- Beijing
- Guangzhou
- Brisbane
- Queensland
- Australia