Shanghai Daily news
It may not be the most impressive-looking street in Shanghai but the lanes
which run off it offer a great variety of high-quality art.
At first glance,
Taikang Road looks like most other streets in Shanghai. Adorned with eateries
and unimpressive and uninviting galleries selling the usual assortment of
antiques and junk, you could easily make a detour and head elsewhere before
coming across anything interesting.
But keep walking for several blocks and
you will notice a shocking pink entrance to a lane that is filled with delights.
Down this lane and a couple on either side of it, you will find some of
Shanghai's most exciting new artists' wares displayed.
Mandi Cao is one such
artist whose studio doubles as a gallery where she can be found busily painting
and preparing for an exhibition in Vienna this month. 116 Studio is home to the
works of two Chinese artists and pieces can be bought for between 100 yuan
(US$12.34) to 400,000 yuan.
Cao is one of many Chinese artists whose works
are on display in Europe. She says she has also exhibited in Australia where she
lived for two years. Half of her customers are foreigners and she says they are
attracted to Taikang Road for its restaurants such as the Kommune Cafe which is
located close to her workshop.
Another eye-catching space is the Han Yuan
Gallery and Cafe with its brilliant blue floors and exposed wood-beamed roof. It
has a half-finished feel which adds to the appeal of the art hanging on its
walls and gives the place a raw, earthy touch.
Tables sit in the middle of
the massive open space and a photographic gallery of works by the owner, Deke
Erh, adjoins. Artworks in his gallery retail for between 10,000 and 250,000
yuan.
"There Art Studio" is home to works from all over China and some of the
pieces are very reasonably priced. The leather cuttings from Shanxi Province are
impressive as is the art from Xi'an, capital city of Shaanxi Province. Artworks
can be purchased here for as little as 800 yuan.
As well as art galleries and
workshops, Taikang Road hosts an extensive array of everyday home furnishings
from couches to tablecloths and everything in between. However, this street
should be avoided if you are not looking to come home laden down with new
additions to your home.
Some of the traditional art galleries, such as the
Red Door Artist Studio, also sell ceramics and other items including a beautiful
wooden lamp with white silk shade for 2,300 yuan.
At the corner of Lane 220
is the Pottery Workshop where all of the ceramics are produced in-house. A
delightful ceramic teapot costs 600 yuan, and delicately painted bowls are
priced at around 200 yuan. The shop assistant says the gallery runs workshops
for anyone interested in learning pottery in the studio space next door.
More
ceramics can be found at the AJN Ceramics Art Gallery where huge clay structures
in natural, earthy colors are displayed. They sell for between 15,000 and
180,000 yuan, depending on their size and level of detail.
Taikang Road is a
great place to spend a weekend if you want to combine shopping, eating and
drinking into one experience.
It's also a great place for entertaining foreign guests and giving them a
taste of the "new" China as well as a good look at a most impressive selection
of artĦĦĦĦ and lifestyle products.