国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

Culture

Chinese artists show experiments with ink, water and paper

By Lin Qi ( China Daily ) Updated: 2016-10-11 14:10:33

Chinese artists show experiments with ink, water and paper

The show Reversed Pervasion displays how Chinese ink painters carry on the ancient genre in new ways.[Photo provided to China Daily]

Reversed Pervasion is an ongoing exhibition that shows artists' diverse, experimental explorations of ink, water and paper-three traditional mediums of Chinese painting.

The show at Beijing's Fine Arts Equivalence gallery communicates how painters of today have carried on with Asian wisdom and aesthetic habits, according to curator He Ji. He says it also reinforces that modern changes in ink art can reshape Chinese art and influence the cultural dialogue between the East and the West.

Depending less on conventional approaches in color and composition, the featured Chinese painters have responded to human emotions in an ever-changing digital world.

Beijinger Zhang Xinjian, for one, has been experimenting with modern color schemes on paper.

The 71-year-old was inspired by the abstract expressionist movement in American painting when producing his work Spring Snow. He mainly uses black, gray and blue to show the poetic scenery of melting snow in early spring.

"Respecting traditions doesn't mean that we should not innovate on a groundbreaking basis," Zhang says. "Many of us (ink painters) have yet to develop individual styles. We're still on the way."

Up-and-coming calligrapher Xia Pencheng, who specializes in caoshu (cursive script), ventures into ink painting by incorporating a rhythmic pace of writing he has practiced with calligraphy since childhood. He is a student of well-known calligrapher Shen Peng.

Xia says most ancient artists were required to do many things-paint, practice calligraphy, compose verses and carve seals-but today's artists mostly confine themselves to a particular art form.

Another participating artist, Song Junsheng, who entered the art circles as a calligrapher, has explored his "incense" approach since the late 1980s. He lights incense sticks to burn Chinese characters and seal marks while painting on paper. Song also uses burned scrolls and paintings to form installations, extending traditional art to a three-dimensional realm with more possibilities.

Song says that people traditionally communicate with heaven by burning incense sticks. Through this ceremonial process of creating, he invites his audience into a space where one forgets his physical being and the material world, and may be inclined to achieve mental peace.

He Ji, the curator, says the domestic market for Chinese art had witnessed a lot of hype around 2004, with the bubble finally bursting in 2009. Many works in the past three decades were done by artists who used Chinese brushes and paper but painted to cater to Western tastes. That led to a fall in prices of such artworks in the country.

"Artists realize that to retain an Asian temperament, they need to make kaleidoscopic attempts. In this respect, Japanese mono ha artists have set a good example," he says.

Mono ha, which means "school of things" in Japanese, was started by a group of artists who emerged in that country in the late 1960s with culturally unique works.

He says that, to establish a stronghold on the international art scene today, Chinese ink art needs both young artists and innovative ideas.

If you go

9 am-6 pm, through Oct 26. Block C 106, Shangpu Art Zone, Songzhuang, Tongzhou district, Beijing. 010-8951-5019.

 
Editor's Picks
Hot words
Most Popular
 
...
武宁县| 威信县| 绵阳市| 威远县| 缙云县| 枣强县| 平潭县| 海丰县| 贵南县| 武强县| 齐齐哈尔市| 正阳县| 沾益县| 安塞县| 米泉市| 金秀| 密云县| 河津市| 石家庄市| 外汇| 黔西| 铜川市| 白玉县| 万源市| 平原县| 龙游县| 乌拉特中旗| 扶余县| 侯马市| 馆陶县| 黄平县| 临清市| 慈溪市| 杭锦后旗| 达尔| 乐山市| 连江县| 泾源县| 竹山县| 平乡县| 攀枝花市|