us embassy in china
-
Alison Friedman - China's Performing Arts in the 21st Century
us embassy in china 2mo ago
-
Bloomberg: Chinese Hacker's Military Identity Unmasked
us embassy in china 3mo ago
-
U.S. Ambassador Attacked in China
us embassy in china 7mo ago
-
Air-Quality Data Release by US Embassy in China Illegal?
us embassy in china 11mo ago
-
China Asks Foreign Governments to Stop Broadcasting Air Quality Data
us embassy in china 11mo ago
-
Project Pengyou & US Embassy Reception
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
US Officials: Chen Guangcheng Wants to Leave China
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
Obama's failed foreign policy dilemma the CHEN effect
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
Chinese dissident calls for US asylum
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
Chinese Dissident Calls for US Asylum (Decision 2012)
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
Chinese Petitioners Appeal to US Embassy In Beijing
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
US Embassy to Simplify Chinese Visas
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
Twitter Response (Chinese): U.S. Supports Peace and Security in Asia
us embassy in china 1y ago
-
Twitter Response (Chinese): Global Leadership, Human Rights, Military
us embassy in china 1y ago
Tags
- 2008 olympic games
- annual conference
- arts management
- asia society
- beijing
- british council
- brown university
- china
- china daily
- cultural revolution
- cum laude
- dance
- dance company
- dance group
- dance theater
- for better or worse
- fulbright association
- fulbright fellow
- games
- general manager
- health
- indie
- international society
- john f kennedy
- kennedy center
- lang lang
- los angeles
- los angeles times
- mandarin chinese
- mark morris
- mark morris dance group
- modern dance
- morris dance
- music
- national radio
- new york
- new york times
- olympic games
- performing artist
- performing artists
- ping pong
- politics
- radio
- s university
- tan dun
- the british council
- the field
- the los angeles times
- the mission
- the united states
- the us
- theatre
- traditional chinese
- united states
- universities
- us embassy in china
- washington dc
Description
Covering an historic arc that reaches from the Cultural Revolution to the 2008 Olympic Games, Alison Friedman looks at how China is searching for a new globalized contemporary identity through music, dance and theater. Examples of artists navigating this search include world-famous classical musicians like Lang Lang and Tan Dun as well as less well-known underground 'Chinese indie' musicians such as Xiao He and the performing artist collective ZuHe Niao. Ms. Friedman also addresses how performing artists are combining traditional Chinese forms with new influences from the west -- or not! -- as well as the role of international partners in the field, including festivals, collaborators, funding bodies, and Embassies, and how the international community is affecting China's contemporary performing arts scene, for better or worse (in sickness and in health....) Alison M. Friedman is the founding director of Ping Pong Productions, a producing and consulting organization headquartered in Beijing with the mission of cultural diplomacy. Clients include TAO Dance Theater, Mark Morris Dance Group, the U.S Embassy in China, the British Council, Guangzhou Municipal Bureau of Culture, and Los Angeles Theatre Works. As director of Ping Pong Productions, Ms. Friedman works closely with Chinese and international governments and arts organizations to facilitate collaborations, tours, and lasting artistic relationships. Fluent in Mandarin Chinese and political negotiations, Ms. Friedman has worked in the performing arts in China for more than a decade. She served as international director of the Beijing Modern Dance Company, general manager of Oscar-winning composer Tan Dun's company Parnassus Productions, Inc., and as a producer and host on Chinese national radio and television programs. Ms. Friedman graduated Phi Beta Kappa/magna cum laude from Brown University with a degree in Chinese Literature/Literary Translation. She was a Fulbright fellow to China, an arts management fellow at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington D.C., and a fellow of the International Society for the Performing Arts. An expert in China's developing arts market, Ms. Friedman lectures internationally in both English and Mandarin Chinese, including keynotes at the National Committee on US-China Relations, Asia Society, Brown University, People's University of China, China International Performing Arts Fair Guangzhou, Fulbright Association 31st Annual Conference, and Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts. She has contributed articles and chapters to journals and collections published in the United States, China, and Europe. Ms. Friedman has been cited as an expert on Chinese performing arts by the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, and China Daily.
