This thesis examines installation works by three Chinese artists included in the group exhibition Unscrolled: Reframing Tradition in Chinese Contemporary Art at the Vancouver Art Gallery, November 15, 2014 to April 6, 2015: Xu Bing’s Background Story (2014), Jennifer Wen Ma’s Black Beauty: A Living Totem (2014), and Sun Xun’s Shan Shui – Cosmos (2014). These works reconfigured the traditions and conventions of Chinese landscape ink painting using new media and techniques such as video, animation, and installation, and in so doing, defied stereotypical interpretations of Chinese art. This was achieved through three main artistic strategies: imitation, materiality, and the juxtaposition of traditional and contemporary art media. The first strategy, as seen in Xu’s work, demonstrates the unconventional use of materials to simulate the appearance of a traditional Chinese landscape painting, thereby leading viewers to misrecognize the installation as an ink painting. The second strategy, as adopted by Ma, involves a display of materiality and physicality through exploration of ink aesthetics. Finally, Sun’s installation environment combines traditional ink painting with new media to reimagine new possibilities for the Chinese landscape genre. By focusing on these artists and discussing their practices in relation to the rest of the exhibition, this thesis concludes that the works subvert essentialist views of Chineseness and challenge cultural assumptions of the viewer in order to reflect on contemporary social and urban realities in modern-day China.