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Ethnographic Museum

Media Release and Material

Zurich, 12 November 2024

Tales of Ginseng Cut in Radiant Red

Ginseng is treasured for the healing powers attributed to it. Its natural presence in the wilderness of Northeast China is rare, and it takes complex knowledge to search out and find it. Numerous tales accordingly entwine around the root and the quest for it. A papercut exhibition at the Ethnographic Museum at the University of Zurich devotes itself to those stories.

The ginseng that grows hidden in the mountainous areas of Northeast China has been cherished for its healing powers since the 17th century. People from poverty-stricken areas of China hoped to attain wealth by finding the treasured root in the wilderness. Their quest was associated with risks, rituals and specific techniques. Ginseng foragers – exclusively men – thus used a secret jargon, special tools and hand grips to find and harvest the plant.

Their arduous and often fruitless quests and their peculiar encounters in the secluded mountains created ideal fertile soil for the spinning of tales. One recurring theme in them is dreaming of ginseng. The region surrounding the Changbai mountain range in Northeast China continues to identify strongly with those stories even though ginseng is grown on plantations these days.

From the Changbai highlands to the world

The Manchurian artist Hou Yumei, born in 1952, records the tales and dreams of the ginseng foragers in papercuts and binds them into ornate storybooks that deal with themes that are still topical in the 21st century: honesty and betrayal, bravery, temperance and respectful handling of natural resources.

The 72-year-old papercut artist took up scissors as a young girl. Her brother initially composed the story texts, but later Hou Yumei emancipated herself and developed her own style against the backdrop of the 1990s, at a time when television supplanted oral folk storytelling in China. To document the vanishing tradition, the government of China and cultural institutions granted funding to folk artists spanning a diverse range of genres. Hou Yumei gained recognition as a master of the art of paper cutting, earning invitations and accolades in and outside China. Today she lives in San Francisco, where she designs papercut decorations and parade figurines for the Chinese New Year celebrations in the city’s Chinatown district – always freehand without any prior sketching. Two large-scale papercuts of her creation adorn the San Francisco subway’s Chinatown station.

Research and art: two perspectives on the same narratives

The works of Hou Yumei found their way to Switzerland thanks to Mareile Flitsch, the director of the Ethnographic Museum. She researched the knowledge of wild ginseng foragers in China in the 1980s and, in the process, encountered Hou Yumei, a woman who delved into the same narratives from a completely different perspective. "The unconventional, expressive papercuts riveted me at first sight," Flitsch recalls. "All of the lore that I compiled during my research had already been recorded in paper cutouts by Hou Yumei." Flitsch was able to acquire some of the artist’s early works. She brought them to the University of Zurich when she was appointed professor here in 2008, and they have been conserved in the permanent collection of the Ethnographic Museum ever since then.

A circle closes

In the exhibition that now presents those works to the public, visitors immerse themselves in a red-and-white world in which they can leaf through the digitalized storybooks and can apprehend the effect of the artworks in detail through three greatly enlarged papercuts and listen to ginseng tales from different epochs. The exhibition also provides background information about the historical and cultural significance of ginseng foraging in Northeast China.

"Dreaming of Ginseng" is Mareile Flitsch’s farewell exhibition at the Ethnographic Museum at University of Zurich; she will be conferred Professor Emeritus in January 2025. In conjunction with her retirement, she has donated numerous other works by Hou Yumei to the museum from her private collection. In conversation and through paper-cutting demonstrations, visitors can directly experience how the works come into being. And if they would like to try their own hand at paper cutting, it goes without saying that pattern templates, scissors and plenty of red paper await them at the exhibition.

Dreaming of Ginseng – Papercut Stories by Hou Yumei
An exhibition at the Ethnographic Museum at the University of Zurich
Pelikanstr. 40, 8001 Zurich
15 November 2024 through 25 May 2025
Tue, Wed, Fri 10 am to 5 pm; Thu 10 am to 7 pm; Sat 2 pm to 5 pm; Sun 11 am to 5 pm

 

The exhibition at the Ethnographic Museum opens on 14 November 2024, at 6 pm. Speeches (in German) by Martina Wernsdörfer and Mareile Flitsch, a talk with artist Hou Yumei


Download (PDF, 130 KB) Media relase 12.11.2024 «Dreaming of Ginseng»

Contacts

Ethnograpic Museum at the University of Zurich
Prof. Dr. Mareile Flitsch, curator
+41 44 634 90 24
flitsch@vmz.uzh.ch

Media Relations
Universität Zürich
+41 44 634 44 67
mediarelations@kommunikation.uzh.ch

 

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Weiterführende Informationen

Images

The ginseng seeker happily carries his find home.
From: Bangchui guniang 棒槌姑娘 (The Ginseng Girl).
Papercut: Hou Yumei 侯玉梅. Inv. no. 37875.010.
Photo: Kathrin Leuenberger, 2012.

Embroidered platform shoes of a Manchurian woman

Embroidered platform shoes of a Manchurian woman

More about Embroidered platform shoes of a Manchurian woman

Donation: SMB Bethlehem Mission Society (Societas Missionaria de Bethlehem).
Inv. no. VMZ 40201.
Photo: Marc Latzel, 2024.

Headdress of Manchurian women

Headdress of Manchurian women

More about Headdress of Manchurian women

Donation: SMB Bethlehem Mission Society (Societas Missionaria de Bethlehem).
Inv. no. VMZ 40218.
Photo: Marc Latzel, 2024.

Manchurian bridal crown, kingfisher blue

Manchurian bridal crown, kingfisher blue

More about Manchurian bridal crown, kingfisher blue

Collector unknown.
Inv. no. VMZ no.4441.
Photo: Marc Latzel, 2024.

The ginseng seeker pulls the ginseng plant out of the ground.
From: Qiaoyu shengu巧遇参姑 (Unexpected Encounter with the Ginseng Girl).
Papercut: Hou Yumei 侯玉梅.
Inv. no. VMZ 37873_20.
Photo: Marc Latzel, 2024.

Papercut: Hou Yumei 侯玉梅.
Inv. no. VMZ 41518
Photo: Marc Latzel, 2024.