Now that I am giving lessons and mentoring, the table had turned. I understood that despite its apparent simplicity, the bamboo painting encompasses a lot of the basic brush stroke techniques and aesthetic arrangement and the importance of ink tones. It is now my job to try to convey and convince others that the simple bamboo is nothing to sneeze at.
I often expressed my dislike for "stencil" work, i.e. painting with all the rules and prescribed composition that the resulting work lacks spunk. But how else should I pass on the basics of a bamboo painting?
I needed to demonstrate the nodes on the main stems. I needed to note that the segments are shorter towards the base. I needed to point out that the little branches grow on alternate sides of each node. I needed to explain how the leaves are grouped together. I needed to .................................
I had to deal with this dichotomy of being compliant and original at the same time. I thought the best way to do this is by showing the real examples of the bamboo, rather than someone else's work of what a bamboo looks like. So I took a lot of pictures of bamboo, all the while trying to categorize the characteristics of a bamboo painting.
These photographs were used as teaching material for my adult students. For my younger middle-school kids I used an actual plant. The tactile experience, along with the visual cues, help the younger audience to comprehend the subject matter a little better.
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