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INK AND THE BODY: Ink and Phenomenology, Exhibition No. 1

Past exhibition
21 September - 15 November 2014
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Li Jin 李津, Ink Hermit 泼墨山人, 2014
Li Jin 李津, Ink Hermit 泼墨山人, 2014
Li Jin 李津, Ink Fairy 泼墨仙女, 2014
Li Jin 李津, Ink Fairy 泼墨仙女, 2014
View image gallery

Ink Studio’s premier group show, Ink and the Body, launches a planned series of three exhibitions examining ink painting in terms of the relationship between the subject and both the artist and viewer, from a phenomenological perspective. The series consists of Ink and the Body, Ink and the Mind, and Ink and the Environment.

 

Ink and the Body explores the multivalent interactions between the human body and Chinese ink: of necessity, the body is the vehicle through which art is both created and perceived. Ideally, the experiencing of an ink painting that was created by an artist in full, instinctive control of the brush (or “in the zone”) can mirror the mental state involved in its creation. Thus, Ink and the Body is the logical entry point for an extended examination of the profound issues central to Chinese ink painting.

 

Much of contemporary Chinese ink painting relates to the body not only as the vehicle of creation, but also in more direct terms. At its most basic, this takes the form of direct impressions of the body, for example in Wang Peng’s ‘84s Performance — the first instance of nude performance art in China — and Zhang Yu’s ongoing series of fingerprint paintings, a fingerprint being an age-old identifying marker. The body becomes the medium of the exquisite and challenging performances by Dai Guangyu, in which ink is metaphorically conceived as nourishment and ritual fluid for the individual’s existence. 

 

Tao Aimin focuses on the body’s action on the world, capturing the imprint of repetitive activity in her rubbings of old wooden washboards. Both the senior sculptor, Qian Shaowu, and renowned painter Li Jin paint images of the body, the latter humorous musings on the place of an individual in contemporary Chinese society, and the former based on European training in three-dimensional figural modeling, translated into ink painting. Chen Haiyan’s vivid images arise from her dreams, and reflect an understanding of color inspired by both the Expressionists and by mid-century master Zao Wuji’s encouragement of her personal color sense. Other artists focus on aspects of the body as metaphor; for example, Zhang Chunhong’s finely detailed renderings of her and her sisters’ long hair make statements concerning relationships and the place of the individual in the world. 

 

Huang Zhiyang captures the sense of universal energy manifest in the body, and Zheng Chongbin considers the psyche as expressed via abstracted human forms. Yang Jiechang further abstracts the body in his starkly expressive Three Men Walking, based on a statement by Confucius. Finally, master calligrapher Wang Dongling reflects on the relationship between the body, the act of wielding the brush, and the different styles of calligraphy developed over the millennia.

Related artists

  • Chen Haiyan 陈海燕

    Chen Haiyan 陈海燕

  • Huang Zhiyang 黄致阳

    Huang Zhiyang 黄致阳

  • Li Jin 李津

    Li Jin 李津

  • Tao Aimin 陶艾民

    Tao Aimin 陶艾民

  • Wang Dongling 王冬龄

    Wang Dongling 王冬龄

  • Yang Jiechang 杨诘苍

    Yang Jiechang 杨诘苍

  • Zheng Chongbin 郑重宾

    Zheng Chongbin 郑重宾

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