The Bashu School of Painting: Image Politics and Culture in the Development of the Chinese Communist Party after 1937

Authors

  • Wang Yueying Faculty of Fine-Applied Arts and Cultural Science, Mahasarakham University, Maha Sarakham 44150, Thailand
  • Suebsiri Saelee Faculty of Fine-Applied Arts and Cultural Science, Mahasarakham University, Maha Sarakham 44150, Thailand

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48048/ajac.2026.87

Abstract

The Bashu Painting School, formally established in 2011 under Chinese government patronage, traces its roots to the ancient Ba–Shu regional culture of Sichuan and Chongqing. This study examines how, after 1937, Bashu painting evolved into a potent vehicle of CCP image politics—flourishing under successive political campaigns and serving as an instrument of state propaganda. Drawing on archival research, policy documents, semi‑structured interviews with artists and curators, and a mixed‑methods analytical framework (historical‑textual coding, semiotic‑statistical mapping, and Barthesian image‑layering), we chart the School’s development across three distinct eras: wartime mobilization (1937–1949), early PRC nation‑building (1949–1966), and Reform‑era humanism (1978–present). Findings reveal that Party‑led institutions shaped the School’s formal qualities, thematic content, and organizational scale, while Bashu artists negotiated ideological imperatives through technical innovation and grassroots engagement. We conclude that Bashu imagery exemplifies a mutually reinforcing dynamic of cultural governance and artistic autonomy, offering a nuanced case of how regional art under centralized regimes can both serve and subtly contest hegemonic narratives. Theoretically, this research advances understanding of image politics by integrating political history and cultural policy analysis, and proposes a model for contemporary cultural practitioners seeking to balance popular resonance with clear political objectives.

 

Highlights

  • Charts three distinct eras (1937–1949 wartime mobilization; 1949–1966 nation‑building; post‑1978 Reform‑era humanism) and reveals how each political campaign shaped formal qualities and thematic content.
  • Demonstrates how Party‑led infrastructures both enabled technical innovation and steered Bashu works toward propaganda objectives.
  • Offers a theoretical integration of image politics and cultural governance, providing a practical model for balancing artistic autonomy with strategic political communication in contemporary cultural policy.

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Published

2025-12-02

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Research Articles