Wei-Cheng Lin

Biography

Wei-Cheng Lin specializes in the history of Chinese art and architecture with a focus on medieval periods. His primary research interests concern issues of visual and material culture in Buddhist art and architecture and China’s funerary practice through history. He is the author of Building a Sacred Mountain: The Buddhist Architecture of China’s Mount Wutai (University of Washington Press, 2014). He has additionally published on a variety of topics, including collecting history, photography and architecture, the historiography of Chinese architectural history, and contemporary Chinese art.

Lin is currently working on two book projects: Performative Architecture of China explores architecture’s performative potential through history and the meanings enacted through such architectural performance. Necessarily Incomplete: Fragments of Chinese Artifacts investigates fragments of Chinese artifacts, as well as the cultural practices they solicited and engaged, to locate their agentic power in generating the multivalent significance of those artifacts, otherwise undetectable or overlooked.

Lin is on the steering committee of the Center for the Art of East Asia and has worked closely with the UChicago Center in Beijing for art exhibitions, conferences, and publications. Lin is the Faculty Director for the Dispersed Chinese Art Digitalization Project (DCADP), a digital humanities initiative supported by the Cyrus Tang Foundation. In addition to the digital projects, Lin also manages the DCADP publication series, including Beijing Zhihua Temple (forthcoming 2024) and Exhibiting East Asian Art in a Global Context (co-edited with Chelsea Foxwell, forthcoming 2025).

Publications

“五台山文殊骑狮像的宗教图像历史与视觉文化分析(下)” [History and Visual Analysis of the Cultic Image of Mañjuśrī Riding a Lion at Mount Wutai – Part II], Chinese Journal of Art Studies 1, no. 2 (Nov 2019), 88-99

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“五台山文殊骑狮像的宗教图像历史与视觉文化分析(上)” [History and Visual Analysis of the Cultic Image of Mañjuśrī Riding a Lion at Mount Wutai – Part I], Chinese Journal of Art Studies 1, no. 1 (June 2019), 84-101

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“Broken Buddhist Statues: The Death of Images and Their Changing Ontology in 10th-12th Century China,” in Refiguring East Asian Religious Art, ed. Wu Hung, Paul Copp, and Katherine Tsiang (Chicago: The Center for the Art of East Asia, University of Chicago, 2019), 78-103.

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“Screening the Chinese Interior: Architectonic and Architecturesque,” in The Screen in East Asia and Beyond, ed. Ping Foong and Chelsea Foxwell (Chicago: The Center for the Art of East Asia, University of Chicago, 2019), 73-100.

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“墓葬建筑空间:从视觉性到物质性的历史发展” [Tomb Architectural Space: Development from Visuality to Materiality in History], Studies on Ancient Tomb Art 4 (2017): 34-52.

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“Performing Center: Multistoried Pagodas in China’s Middle Period,” Ars Orentalis 46 (2016)

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“Structural, Visual, or Iconic: The Transmutation of Wooden Brackets in Modern China,” Frontiers of History in China 10, no. 2 (2015)

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“Untranslatable Iconicity in Liang Sicheng’s Theory of Architectural Translatability,” Art and Translation 5, no. 2 (2013)

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Relocating and Relocalizing Mount Wutai: Vision and Visuality in Mogao Cave 61, Artibus Asiae 71, no. 1 (2013)

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2013

“Replicating the Past: Ink Rubbing and Its Related Ideas in Contemporary Chinese Art,” in Original Intentions: Essays on Production, Reproduction, and Interpretation in the Arts of China, ed. Nicholas Pearce and Jason Steuber (Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press, 2012)

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Profiles

Andrei Pop
Andrei Pop
Modern Art and Aesthetics
Department Chair
CWAC 162 | Tuesdays 1-2pm or by appointment.
773.702.0278
Niall Atkinson
Niall Atkinson
Medieval and Renaissance Architecture and Urban History
CWAC 260
773.702.0270
Wei-Cheng Lin
Wei-Cheng Lin
Chinese Art and Architecture
Architectural Studies Advisor
CWAC 268 | Office Hours: Wednesdays 9-10am and 12-1pm
773.702.0268
2006-07
Iowa State University
Assistant Professor, East Asian Art and Architecture
Potters Wheel
Richard Neer
Ancient Greek Art and Architecture
CWAC 259
773.702.5890
Megan Sullivan
Megan Sullivan
Modern and Contemporary Latin American Art
CWAC 272
773.702.5126