Zen Encounters in Art

Amelie Gallery, Beijing,China.
Opening Reception:
15:00, Nov. 13th, 2011.
Artists: Chen Qi, Yang Maoyuan, Huang Jing, Li Xin
Curator: Tony Chang
Through thousands of years of Chinese art, few accomplished a true Zen
approach to painting like Bada Shanren in Ming Dynasty. His fish
were both inspiring and absurd. His birds soared right through the heavens
into our modern consciousness. How many artists are there today who can
follow in his footsteps and revitalize the ancient idea of Zen?
Chen Qi has lived in Nanjing for many years,
and is renowned for his water-based printmaking art. Whether making endless
waves or single lotus petals, he finds enlightenment within the old mediums
of ink and paper. He spends long periods closed off from the world as
he carves out his images, his spirit wandering across the paper like a
silkworm spinning silk, weaving dreams that stretch across the ages.
The drunken monk Yang Maoyuan began as an ambitious
youth, crossing lands and seas like Tripitaka's journeys through the spirit
world, dodging demons in his quest for the Buddha. In recent years he
has been devotedly honing his craft, his hands becoming covered in calluses
and cracks like the leaf of the Bodhi tree. He sits alone on the high
mountain peak, looking out across the moonlit land, seeking enlightenment
through painstaking effort.
Then there is the reclusive scholar Huang Jing,
he who stands against the wind with a clear and tranquil mind. From his
brush flows the lush landscape of south-west China, creating beautiful,
poetic scenes of this watery land.
Quiet Li Xin is silent like Bada Shanren,
but just as sharp of mind. He is wholly absorbed in painting, and especially
gifted at landscapes. Under his brush, the great northern wilderness emerges
in all of its power, with the elegant vigor of Song and Yuan painting
styles hidden just below the surface. It is stripped of any decorative
flourishes, even the brush play of the literati painters.
The above are all highly refined and accomplished
artists. To learn of their achievements one need look no further than
their art, as it is beyond the power of words to describe. As the year
draws to a close, I write these simple words to reminisce about the past
and welcome the coming spring.
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