Stephanie?Su
- Assistant Professor
- History of Asian Art
- ART HISTORY
Stephanie Su is an East Asian art historian. Her research interests include the Sino-Japanese relationship, global modernism, global color studies, historiography, history of collecting and exhibition, Japanese prints and papers.
She received her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. Before coming to 91传媒, she was an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow for Cultures of Conservation at the Bard Graduate Center in New York, and the Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Fellow at the Sainsbury Institute for the Study of Japanese Arts and Cultures at the University of East Anglia in UK. Besides researching, she has actively curated exhibitions, such as the special exhibition, Art Elements: Materials, Motive, and Meaning at the CU Art Museum, Appropriation and Transformation: the Exploration of Painting by Chinese Artists Studied Abroad in the Early Twentieth Century at the He Xiangning Art Museum in Shenzhen, China (2015-16), for which she was the Assistant Curator.
Her first book, History Painting Crossing Borders: A Transnational History of Modern Art in Early Twentieth Century China and Japan, examines how ancient China was reimagined to be an idealized cultural entity that accommodated divergent discourse on civilizations, cultural identities and nationhood. Her book sheds new light on how regional identity and historical connections across East Asia led to the formation of modern nations and arts.
Currently she is working on two book projects. Her second book, tentatively titled Color Matters: Materiality, Modernity, and Transmedia Aesthetics in 20th century Japanese Art, examines the formation of modern art in Japan through the lens of color. From pigments to concepts, her book reveals the interconnected relationship between artistic creation, literary imagination, scientific development, and transcultural exchanges, contributing to the broader field of global color studies. Her third book project, Recycle and Rebirth: The Im/materiality of Washi Paper in Contemporary Japanese Art, explores the ways contemporary Japanese artists reimagine the materiality of washi paper. Washi, acknowledged by UNESCO as an intangible cultural heritage of humanity, is often presented globally as a traditional craft and emblem of Japanese identity. Her project aims to reshape the public perception of washi by highlighting its innovation in the hands of female artists. See Professor Su discuss her research in the interview, “Five Questions for Stephanie Su” on CU Connections.
Her researched have received support from the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art, Metropolitan Center for Far Eastern Art Studies, Japan Foundation, Association for Asian Studies, University of Colorado President’s Fund for the Humanities, Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellowship in Cultures of Conservation, Japan Art History Forum, among others.
Monograph:
· History Painting Crossing Borders: A Transnational History of Modern Art in Early 20th Century China and Japan. Leiden: Brill. (Forthcoming)
Journal Articles:
· White in Onchi Kōshirō’s Work in the 1930s: Abstraction, Aspiration, and Contradiction,” Review of Japanese Culture and Society (forthcoming, 2025)
· “Redefining Femininity in Imperial Japan: The Chinese Female Body in Uemura Shōen’s Work Yōkihi (1922),” special issue on “Imperial Intersectionalities: Reorienting Japanese Art History,” Japan Forum (forthcoming, 2025).
· “Exhibition as Art Historical Space: Narratives in the 1933 Chinese Art Exhibition in Paris,” The Art Bulletin 103, no. 3 (September 2021): 125-148.
· “Sensuous Past: Historical Imagination and Transmedia Aesthetics in Modern China,” Frontier of Literary Studies in China 2019, 13(3): 440-474.
Articles in Edited Volumes:
· “Le voyage au Japon et la question de la modernisation de la peinture,” L’encre en mouvement : Une histoire de la peinture chinoise au XXe siècle, edited by E?ric Lefebvre and Mael Bellec, 53-69. Paris: Paris Musées, 2022.
· “Mimetic Desire and Expressive Colors: New Directions in Modern Chinese Ink Art,” Fantastic Brush: 20th Century Chinese Ink Arts from the Robert and Lisa Kessler Collection, edited by Tianlong Jiao, 28-35. Denver: Denver Art Museum, 2021.
· “Weaving Art, Science, and Modern Design: Keinen’s Painting Album of Flowers and Birds,” in Kimono in Print: 300 Years of Japanese Design, edited by Vivian Li. Leiden: Hotei Publishing, 2020.
· “Xu Beihong.” Grove Encyclopedia of Asian Art, ed. Sonya Lee. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018.
· “Translating History Painting: Xu Beihong and Confucianism in Modern China,” in Un Ma?tre et ses Ma?tres: Xu Beihong et la peinture académique fran?aise. Beijing: Xu Beihong Memorial Art Museum, May 2014.
· “The Moon Night: Visualizing the Musical Experience in 1930s China,” Face to Face. The Transcendence of the Arts in China and Beyond: Approaches to Modern and Contemporary Art, Global Art Monograph Series, edited by Rui Oliveira Lopes, 136-157. Lisbon: Artistic Studies Research Centre, 2013.
· “Ruins as Sites of Modernity: Yan Wenliang’s Representation of Roman Ruins in 1930,” Modern Art Asia, vol. 5, November 2010. Reprinted in Majella Munro ed., Modern Art Asia, Issues 1-8. Cambridge, UK: Enzo Arts and Publishing Limited. 2012. Chinese version: “廢墟作為現代性場域:顏文梁1930年代作品中的羅馬古跡再現”,
Five Hundred Years of Chinese Oil Painting 1542-2000, eds. Zhao Li and Yu Ding, 187-198. Changsha: Hunan Art Publisher, 2014.
· “Classicizing Creative Prints: Yamamoto Kanae in France.” Awash in Color: French and Japanese Prints, eds. Anne Leonard and Chelsea Foxwell, 163-171. Chicago: Smart Museum of Art, 2012.
Articles in Chinese:
· “The Transformation of Bird-and-Flower Painting in the Early 20th Century” (二十世纪初花鸟画的转变),《行云流墨——巴黎赛努奇博物馆藏现当代中国绘画展》(Le voyage de l’encre: peintures chinoise modernes et contemporaines du musée Cernuschi) Paris and Shanghai: Paris Musée and Bund One Art Museum, 2024.
· “Foolish Man Moving the Mountain: The International Significance of a Chinese Fable,” (愚公移山:中国寓言的国际性意义), Meishu 美术杂志, vol. 633, September 2020.
· “The Element of Japan in Modern Chinese Art: Overseas Research on Early Twentieth Century Chinese and Japanese Art” (现代中国美术中的日本因素:兼论20世纪中日美术史海外研究现状), Art Exploration (艺术探索), issue 1, 2018.
· “Chen Shuren and the Reform of Bird-and-Flower Painting in Japan” (陈树人与日本现代花鸟画的改革) in Passing Through Fusang: The Reform of Painting by Chinese Artists Studied in Japan, 1905-1937 (借路扶桑:留日画家的中国画改良,1905-1937). Guangzhou: Lingnan Publisher, May 2018.
· “Reconstructing Aesthetic Paradigms in a Global Context: on Xu Beihong’s ‘Peinture chinoise’ Published in the French Art Journal in 1933” (在世界史语境下重构中国艺术典范:试论徐悲鸿1933年在法国期刊发表的〈中国绘画史〉一文). In Wang Wenjuan, ed., Zhongguo meishu: Shijie yujing (Chinese Art: Global Context). Beijing: Modern Publisher, 2017.
· “Recent Trends and Future Directions in Overseas Chinese Art Exhibitions,” (“海外中国美术展览趋势与未来展望) in the QuarterlyJournal of the Henan Art Museum. Zhengzhou: Henan Art Museum. Volume. 15, No. 1, 2016.
· “ Xu Beihong in Japan: Reconsidering Modern Chinese Art” (徐悲鸿在日本:现代中国绘画再思考”), in Meishu 美术杂志, October 2013.