Johnson Chang
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Johnson Chang (Cantonese: Chang Tsong-zung;[1] Chinese: 張頌仁) (born 1960) is a curator and dealer of contemporary Chinese art. He is a co-founder of the Asia Art Archive (AAA) in Hong Kong and a guest professor of the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou.[2] The New York Times described him as "a force in contemporary Chinese art since the 1980s",[3] and Sotheby's described him as "the godfather of contemporary Chinese art".[4]
Chang Tsong-zung was born in 1960 in Hong Kong; his father was an engineer and his grandfather was a banker.[1] He graduated from Williams College in 1973.[5] He has been curating art exhibitions since the 1980s. He founded Hanart TZ gallery in Hong Kong in 1983.[6] Artists that Chang has discovered include Feng Mengbo, Gu Wenda, Liu Wei, Fang Lijun, Wang Guangyi, Yue Minjun, Zhan Wang, and Zhang Xiaogang.[1]
It was through his gallery that he organized exhibitions of the Taiwanese sculptor Ju Ming at the Singapore Art Museum in 1986 and Place Vendôme in Paris in 1997. It was also with Hanart that he staged "China’s New Art Post-1989," which debuted at the 1993 Hong Kong Arts Festival and then toured the United States from 1995 to 1997.[citation needed]
In Shanghai in late 2010, Chang organized "West Heavens," a contemporary art collaboration between China and India.[3]
In their annual "The Power 100" listing, Art Review named Chang, alongside Claire Hsu, for their co-founding of the AAA.[7]