What is Chinese Brush Painting? I suppose this is a rhetorical question, or is it?
Can a painting done with oil painting brushes but carries a Chinese motif be called a Chinese Brush Painting? How about doing Monet's Water Lilies using Chinese brushes, can the resulting work be called a Chinese Brush Painting?
In Chinese societies, one would use the term "Guo Hua" (Guo means national, Hua means painting; to paint) to describe traditional Chinese Brush Painting. Guo Hua is done with a round brush, using ink or pigments, mixed with water and painted on Xuan(Hsuan) paper or Juan(silk). The finished painting is signed off with seal(s) and mounted either on paper or silk and presented as scrolls, or more recently, in frames.
Aside from the perfect complement of the Xuan(Hsuan) paper as a writing medium, the Chinese brush shoulders perhaps the most vital role in the discipline of Guo Hua. It has a round body that come to a point. The mission is how to coordinate the strands of hair to the point, and with the belly of the brush to form lines with various thickness and shapes. Chinese use the brush for their calligraphy; thus calligraphy and painting are firmly intertwined. In fact, the Chinese often use the term to "write" a painting to describe the act of painting, and the audience is urged to "read" a painting. This symbiotic relationship has led to the term "Shu Hua" (calligraphy, painting) to describe the 2 commonly linked art forms and exhibition halls in museums catering to the art of Shu Hua.
Bi-Fa (Bi means writing instrument, Fa means the method) describes the nuisances of mastering the brush. Bi-Fa is also known as Gi Bun Gong (the fundamentals) in some circles. Think of the fingers holding the brush as the A-arm of a car's suspension. Our job is to load the brush with the correct amount of water/ink/pigment, with the help of correct camber angles and toe-in, apply suitable pressure and speed, such that the tip, or edge, or the belly of the brush, or combinations of such, form a desirable footprint on the Xuan or Juan. In other words, keep the tire on the road, mitigating sand, gravel, sleet, rain or snow, taking into account speed and tire pressure. Thus one can spin wheel, drive, skid, drift, brake or even induce wheel hop. Sounds complicated? Well, when we drive most of us have an awareness of whether the road is slippery, or if we have run over something and we instinctively adjust our driving to the road conditions. We are at ease because we know what our equipment can and will do.
In order to properly "read" a painting, the audience need to be equipped with some basic knowledge of Guo Hua so they can be literate in this subject. Obviously Bi-Fa is at the center stage. We demand artists to show calligraphic characteristics in their brush strokes. Virtues of the line, how ink or color is dispersed are all important.
This example shows lively ink tone, deliberate yet free strokes. Ink should have 5 tones, and lines should demonstrate "Li"(strength). This is the difference between a motionless live snake and a dead flaccid one, even though both trace the same lines.
Examples of writing with different parts of the brush. Whether this is an egret or heron is not important. What is important is the brushstroke and the attitude.
(to be continued)
I am an enthusiast of Chinese Brush Painting and I would like to share my trials and tribulations in learning the craft. I want to document the process, the inspiration and the weird ideas behind my projects and to address some of the nuances related to this dicipline. I hope to create a dialogue and stir up some interest in the art of painting with a Chinese brush on Xuan. In any case, it would be interesting to see my own evolution as time progresses. This is my journal
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Wednesday, June 5, 2013
Beaverton Creek (classic) completion
I know I have done a "what if" scenario by painting in pink leaves/flowers on the trees in the foreground using Photoshop; but that was before most of the incidentals were painted in and colored.
Now that I could see the finish line, I'm having second thoughts.
I am leery that pink might be too flashy.
There's only one way to find out. I painted a couple of test swatches, one in pink and the other Blue Hue Three.
The blue looked nice and seemed to blend in well with the rest of the scenery. Hence the problem. It blended in too well and the painting looked ....uninviting.
The pink was uplifting and definitely grabbed my attention. It worked well as a punctuation mark! Now the fat lady sings!
The objects in the near ground were done mostly "boned"; with outline to give them a more defined, crisp footprint. I tried to create the sense of a diverse and mixed shrubbery by punching up the color palette and painting in leaves of various species; avoiding the sense of total chaos at the same time. Fortunately I've been to this place a hundred times and I had a pretty good idea in my head. As one travels further back into the painting, the images became "boneless", edges were not well defined, and the color became more monochromatic. I actually employed alum solution to help create the white margins around tree trunks. This worked particularly well for objects in the distance, where a dark outline would be too crisp for the purpose and should be avoided. I suppose I would call this alum technique as a "soft bone" technique. Obviously this required planning; the tree trunks were among the first items to be painted with alum.
The bamboo areas in the left midriff portion seemed a little flat. I tried to paint in a few more leaves but that looked really cluttered and was concealing my brushstrokes, so I backed off. I settled on selectively darkening certain areas to give it a lumpy look, to get more depth in that cluster.
The creek still looked too open ended for me. I would like the bottom part to close off some more. I also wanted to warm up the foreground somewhat, to subtly draw it out further from the background. Harking back to Photoshop tricks, I decided to add a warming filter by painting a very diluted and light yellow color over the lower half of the landscape, and the bottom end of the creek. I was hoping the slight yellow tint on the water might work as a gradient tool to help narrow the creek somewhat.
I wish there is a way to retain this wet look. There is so much more depth to everything. Images just want to jump off the Xuan.
I decided to add a few ducks to this painting, or rather, to move them to different coves as compared with the original draft. It seems like I couldn't do a painting anymore without adding a bird or heron or something. In this case, that's what Beaverton Creek is all about. A nature park in a city.
Now that I could see the finish line, I'm having second thoughts.
I am leery that pink might be too flashy.
There's only one way to find out. I painted a couple of test swatches, one in pink and the other Blue Hue Three.
The blue looked nice and seemed to blend in well with the rest of the scenery. Hence the problem. It blended in too well and the painting looked ....uninviting.
The pink was uplifting and definitely grabbed my attention. It worked well as a punctuation mark! Now the fat lady sings!
The bamboo areas in the left midriff portion seemed a little flat. I tried to paint in a few more leaves but that looked really cluttered and was concealing my brushstrokes, so I backed off. I settled on selectively darkening certain areas to give it a lumpy look, to get more depth in that cluster.
The creek still looked too open ended for me. I would like the bottom part to close off some more. I also wanted to warm up the foreground somewhat, to subtly draw it out further from the background. Harking back to Photoshop tricks, I decided to add a warming filter by painting a very diluted and light yellow color over the lower half of the landscape, and the bottom end of the creek. I was hoping the slight yellow tint on the water might work as a gradient tool to help narrow the creek somewhat.
I decided to add a few ducks to this painting, or rather, to move them to different coves as compared with the original draft. It seems like I couldn't do a painting anymore without adding a bird or heron or something. In this case, that's what Beaverton Creek is all about. A nature park in a city.
One of the things I like about this painting is that there are so many points of interest in it.
It invites you to explore each little snippet, to "read" the painting, as Chinese would say.
Some of these sections could stand in as a complete painting in its own right.
I need to hang this up now and glance at it occasionally. I'm sure something will come up for me to make corrections.
Sunday, June 2, 2013
Beaverton Creek Classic (Coloring)
I felt a little better now that I know how to handle the foreground.
Parallel to the creek runs a trail, partly dirt and gravel, and partly constructed of wooden planks. This trail starts at the little lookout area and then follows the bank. I am having great difficulty with painting this trail because I really don't have a clear image as to how this trail should look like on paper. I just haphazardly plotted the footprint and will deal with it later.
The leaves would assume different colors. It would be boring if all of them were green. I decided to have green, yellow, red, crimson, and blue leaves. It is not uncommon for Blue Hue Three (176) to be used as a leaf color; it is like a punctuation mark! That and Green Label Hue Three(173).
For these leaves I would use yellow as the base coat. It is important to write the color in using brushstrokes. Forsake the temptation to just block in the entire area. In this particular example, the leaves are little rectangles. So using the brush tip, start at the point, press and lift at the opposite side. As we pile on layers of color, the tone becomes more saturated.
The different colors tend to carve out a tiny margin around themselves (perhaps due to brushstrokes not exactly the same as I repeat the process) and give the leaves a thickness. I would pile cinnabar on yellow, then carmine on top of that, for example. After the entire painting is done, I would then re-outline the leaves and trunks for a better definition.
I now need to put in the grounds. What I had was a faint green smudge with dark outlines. I would go over the entire ground with brown (684) mixed with ink, taking care to leave the highlighted areas uncovered. By selectively using different tones of brown, and subsequent highlighting with Green Label Three again, I can map out the contour and the topography of this landscape and render a three dimensional feel to it.
Stepping back and look at the painting. On the lower right hand corner I have a tree in the middle of the trail. Looks bad! So I decided to paint in some foliage around the base to make it less obvious. I also embellished the trail with blades of grass or vegetation here and there. I would probably write in some moss dots too, but I'll wait until the painting is almost done.
Once that problem is fixed, the left side of the bridge looks naked. I had the small trees there to conceal the entrance, but there was no hint of a path leading to the bridge and thus the bridge seem detached and was not connected to the painting emotionally. My faithful foliage came to the rescue again. These leaves could be shrubs, or they could be from the trees; a little added intrigue for the audience!
I also darkened the sky somewhat, such that it is now connected to the rest of the painting.
A margin of green around the shores to frame the landscape. I use that as a minimalistic representation of reflections, certainly in accordance with classical Chinese Brush painting doctrine.
to be continued.
Parallel to the creek runs a trail, partly dirt and gravel, and partly constructed of wooden planks. This trail starts at the little lookout area and then follows the bank. I am having great difficulty with painting this trail because I really don't have a clear image as to how this trail should look like on paper. I just haphazardly plotted the footprint and will deal with it later.
The leaves would assume different colors. It would be boring if all of them were green. I decided to have green, yellow, red, crimson, and blue leaves. It is not uncommon for Blue Hue Three (176) to be used as a leaf color; it is like a punctuation mark! That and Green Label Hue Three(173).
For these leaves I would use yellow as the base coat. It is important to write the color in using brushstrokes. Forsake the temptation to just block in the entire area. In this particular example, the leaves are little rectangles. So using the brush tip, start at the point, press and lift at the opposite side. As we pile on layers of color, the tone becomes more saturated.
The different colors tend to carve out a tiny margin around themselves (perhaps due to brushstrokes not exactly the same as I repeat the process) and give the leaves a thickness. I would pile cinnabar on yellow, then carmine on top of that, for example. After the entire painting is done, I would then re-outline the leaves and trunks for a better definition.
I now need to put in the grounds. What I had was a faint green smudge with dark outlines. I would go over the entire ground with brown (684) mixed with ink, taking care to leave the highlighted areas uncovered. By selectively using different tones of brown, and subsequent highlighting with Green Label Three again, I can map out the contour and the topography of this landscape and render a three dimensional feel to it.
Stepping back and look at the painting. On the lower right hand corner I have a tree in the middle of the trail. Looks bad! So I decided to paint in some foliage around the base to make it less obvious. I also embellished the trail with blades of grass or vegetation here and there. I would probably write in some moss dots too, but I'll wait until the painting is almost done.
Once that problem is fixed, the left side of the bridge looks naked. I had the small trees there to conceal the entrance, but there was no hint of a path leading to the bridge and thus the bridge seem detached and was not connected to the painting emotionally. My faithful foliage came to the rescue again. These leaves could be shrubs, or they could be from the trees; a little added intrigue for the audience!
I also darkened the sky somewhat, such that it is now connected to the rest of the painting.
A margin of green around the shores to frame the landscape. I use that as a minimalistic representation of reflections, certainly in accordance with classical Chinese Brush painting doctrine.
to be continued.
Thursday, May 30, 2013
Flamingo Tango
One of my teacher accused me of unable to Let Go ! Thus my brushstrokes are not deliberate and feel inhibited. I was told many times to let it all hang out, because I had to go so much overboard just to reach par!
I was cutting up some paper for calligraphy, which I was in no mood to do. Why don't I doodle, or just horse around with the brush? Perfect excuse for not doing calligraphy!
Images of a pair of Flamingo dancing came to mind.
Not bad, I thought. Then I decided to add in a few black areas to signal the trailing edge feathers.
Us Chinese have a saying: Painting legs on a snake......................................... messing up a good thing by being redundant and overbearing. The black lines were clearly an afterthought, and not syncing with the rest of the brushstrokes.
In my disgust, I grabbed a whole sheet of 4 ft Xuan and repeated the process, except this time I figured a way to incorporate the black areas a little better.
I don't dislike it. I thought it looks interesting. I could do a better job on the body! I thought the body on the smaller piece looks better.
I decided to anchor the birds a little better by writing in some darker ink brushstrokes, being careful to display calligraphic characteristics, especially with turns and lifts.
I was cutting up some paper for calligraphy, which I was in no mood to do. Why don't I doodle, or just horse around with the brush? Perfect excuse for not doing calligraphy!
Images of a pair of Flamingo dancing came to mind.
Not bad, I thought. Then I decided to add in a few black areas to signal the trailing edge feathers.
Us Chinese have a saying: Painting legs on a snake......................................... messing up a good thing by being redundant and overbearing. The black lines were clearly an afterthought, and not syncing with the rest of the brushstrokes.
In my disgust, I grabbed a whole sheet of 4 ft Xuan and repeated the process, except this time I figured a way to incorporate the black areas a little better.
I don't dislike it. I thought it looks interesting. I could do a better job on the body! I thought the body on the smaller piece looks better.
I decided to anchor the birds a little better by writing in some darker ink brushstrokes, being careful to display calligraphic characteristics, especially with turns and lifts.
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Heron Taking Off
I was cleaning out the attic when I came across a model glider that my son and I had built years ago.
This baby has a 6 feet wingspan and is covered with blue and white mylar at the wings and white on the fuselage. Somehow it reminded me of a heron.
I wanted to paint a heron taking off, with its dropped nose and neck. Now I'm thinking about the supersonic Concorde. These images are good; hopefully they can help lend some emotional content to the painting.
Heron taking flight would assume a lower view angle, thus framed by grassy weeds.
I first wrote the lines for the stalks, then I turned the Xuan over and retraced some of these lines with alum solution. As we recall, alum works as a resist. The reason to do this on the back side is because it is more effective this way.
Now I painted in the heron itself. The grassy weeds now have a narrow white margin provided by the alum, thus making a better separation from the heron; creating a perception of distance.
Painted in the shore line and trees to add a perception of distance. I tried to highlight the heron by darkening the surrounding with a wash. The best concoction for this wash is the brush bath. This bath water is the sum of all the colors used for this painting, and is guaranteed to provide the right tone.
This is what the painting looks when dried.
This is an exploratory piece. I would like to apply what I've learned from this to a few more?
This baby has a 6 feet wingspan and is covered with blue and white mylar at the wings and white on the fuselage. Somehow it reminded me of a heron.
I wanted to paint a heron taking off, with its dropped nose and neck. Now I'm thinking about the supersonic Concorde. These images are good; hopefully they can help lend some emotional content to the painting.
Heron taking flight would assume a lower view angle, thus framed by grassy weeds.
I first wrote the lines for the stalks, then I turned the Xuan over and retraced some of these lines with alum solution. As we recall, alum works as a resist. The reason to do this on the back side is because it is more effective this way.
Now I painted in the heron itself. The grassy weeds now have a narrow white margin provided by the alum, thus making a better separation from the heron; creating a perception of distance.
Painted in the shore line and trees to add a perception of distance. I tried to highlight the heron by darkening the surrounding with a wash. The best concoction for this wash is the brush bath. This bath water is the sum of all the colors used for this painting, and is guaranteed to provide the right tone.
This is what the painting looks when dried.
This is an exploratory piece. I would like to apply what I've learned from this to a few more?
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Beaverton Creek (Classic) cont'd
One of my weaknesses is my tendency to "Tu","Mew". That can be loosely translated as to doodle, to sketch. In Chinese brush painting, where Bi-Fa is all important, the fact that I muck up any brush strokes is a cardinal sin. I don't want to show a wad of cotton, but strands of fibers.
Thus I try to be a little more patient, a little more deliberate, try to coax myself into a calligraphic state of mind.
I just don't like the result. The imagery look contrived. I really have not mastered the art nor the discipline of incorporating technique with thought. The nirvana for me would be to be able to achieve Xieyi without sloppiness.
All of a sudden, the Xuan appeared to have multiplied in size. I'm having difficulty filling in the landscape with mixed foliage. I suppose I would rely on wash and moss dots at the final phases.
My original premise was to lay down a wash of Prussian Blue at the top of the paper to give it perspective and interest, as I did with my Xanadu Fall painting, but I didn't quite like it this time around.
It has been almost 4 months since I conceived of the painting and by now cherry blossoms are in bloom. Why not embellish it with cherry blossoms then?
Thus I try to be a little more patient, a little more deliberate, try to coax myself into a calligraphic state of mind.
I just don't like the result. The imagery look contrived. I really have not mastered the art nor the discipline of incorporating technique with thought. The nirvana for me would be to be able to achieve Xieyi without sloppiness.
All of a sudden, the Xuan appeared to have multiplied in size. I'm having difficulty filling in the landscape with mixed foliage. I suppose I would rely on wash and moss dots at the final phases.
My original premise was to lay down a wash of Prussian Blue at the top of the paper to give it perspective and interest, as I did with my Xanadu Fall painting, but I didn't quite like it this time around.
It has been almost 4 months since I conceived of the painting and by now cherry blossoms are in bloom. Why not embellish it with cherry blossoms then?
I think this looks more inviting.
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Beaverton Creek (Classic)
Having embraced the 2 attempts at painting Beaverton Creek, the thought of doing a third painting in a more traditional style intrigues me.
I've never really been too crazy about the classic style, so this idea actually frightens me. My problem is that the style seemed so difficult and unnatural for me. I feel compelled to regurgitate what little I've learned from the fringes of my memory, and that hurts!
But try I must. Deem it as a self assigned homework.
Worked out a rough sketch of what the painting might look like.
Right off the bat, I proceeded with something not quite kosher. I started out with a faint wash of the landscape map on the back of my Xuan paper. I find this process to be more Xieyi and helps me to assemble the pieces on the front.
Next I tried to sketch in the key landmarks of this painting. Scattered point perspective enjoys more of a birds-eye view and is not as compressed as in vanishing horizon perspective. I need to bring in more points of reference this time. Thus the bridge, and the tall firs, and the little vista by the banks. I tried to be faithful to the actual flora of this locale, but I took liberty with the riffraff vegetation. I thought this would be a prime opportunity to employ the different ways of portraying leaves.
Speaking of leaves, I learned that by writing the vein first, it is easier to complete the rest of them. Notice I said "write". These simple line should resemble writings more than tracings.
I am actually having problem in developing the painting in this format. I better stop before I have to perform the invidious task of mutilating the piece.
I've never really been too crazy about the classic style, so this idea actually frightens me. My problem is that the style seemed so difficult and unnatural for me. I feel compelled to regurgitate what little I've learned from the fringes of my memory, and that hurts!
But try I must. Deem it as a self assigned homework.
Worked out a rough sketch of what the painting might look like.
Right off the bat, I proceeded with something not quite kosher. I started out with a faint wash of the landscape map on the back of my Xuan paper. I find this process to be more Xieyi and helps me to assemble the pieces on the front.
Next I tried to sketch in the key landmarks of this painting. Scattered point perspective enjoys more of a birds-eye view and is not as compressed as in vanishing horizon perspective. I need to bring in more points of reference this time. Thus the bridge, and the tall firs, and the little vista by the banks. I tried to be faithful to the actual flora of this locale, but I took liberty with the riffraff vegetation. I thought this would be a prime opportunity to employ the different ways of portraying leaves.
Speaking of leaves, I learned that by writing the vein first, it is easier to complete the rest of them. Notice I said "write". These simple line should resemble writings more than tracings.
I am actually having problem in developing the painting in this format. I better stop before I have to perform the invidious task of mutilating the piece.
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