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
Friday, March 17, 2023
Waste Basket Diving
Wednesday, March 1, 2023
Paint for the waste basket
It's time to put my game on, tackling my mosaic project. I really can't let a 9 nine old show me up, can I?
I am using a semi-sized Xuan because it is thin enough to facilitate the copying process. I will need to trace my stencil with a brush only this piece of paper. I suppose I can trace it out with pencil first to get all the pieces and then cover up the pencil lines with ink brush once the painting is done, but I don't have the patience for it. The bottom line is I hate to do the same thing twice; tracing my stencil is already a chore for me.
Using the same logic, I pick out other pieces of my "mosaic' and address them with different colors.
I am assigning a deeper, darker color to the right half of my composite.
Tuesday, February 14, 2023
Inauragation of my Tedious Project
I am going to make the most out of my "stencil" from my so called tedious project. I feel that I should be able to recoup the time and effort I invested in developing that stencil and frankly I want to see how many variations I can make out of my mosaic plot map. I took a picture of my mosaic outlines so that I could print off copies of it when I feel the urge to play. Obviously I could also do it the traditional hard way, by laboriously copying it onto another piece of Xuan paper using ink and brush. If I do that, I would be able to retain the original dimensions, which is approximately 13 inch by 26 inch.
Andrew is a 9 year old 4th grader who likes to draw. One of his work enjoys the accolade of being selected for display at the administration office of his school district.
Thursday, February 2, 2023
Starting a tedious project
A painting at an art exhibition spoke to me. I really don't know how to describe the painting because I am not familiar with the various styles of western art. Labels like pop art or art deco are all Greek to me, or is is it French? The painting that spoke to me reminds me of Andy Warhol's silk screen. I guess what caught my fancy is the challenge ( or ability ) to define different areas of the painting with very specific color and the lack of a gradient within that particular space. To me it is like re-defining my concept of a pixel. Here my pixel could be a line, an entire square or whatever shape. Actually I think I am making things more complicated than they really are; what I am really trying to do is to create a mosaic. In my mosaic, all the "tiles" are painted on paper and each "tile" can assume a specific color, and one color only.
If I am going to construct a mosaic painting, my usual Xieyi style brushstrokes would be useless here. I think a Gongbi style approach might work. Generally speaking Xieyi brushstrokes rely on broad brushstrokes to give shape ( as compared to filling in with color to render shape ) Gongbi style painting requires outlining everything in the painting and then filling in with color. It is way more meticulous and rarely spontaneous. There is always careful staging and posing for Gongbi style painting. Hence I believe my mosaic demands Gongbi.
Gongbi painting is always done on sized Xuan paper. Alum is used as the sizing agent. The paper is less absorbent after sizing and allows the color to flow more freely. Xuan paper that is not sized would absorb ink and color instantaneously and whatever mark one makes is indelible. With sized Xuan there is some room for negotiation and the painting techniques are vastly different.
The typical brush used for writing the outlines has a long and slender brush profile. The long hair makes the brush less susceptible to force exerted by the wrist and therefore writing a uniform line with it is easier; in theory that is. An ordinary brush has a much bigger belly and any variations in applied pressure results in brushstrokes of varying width, anywhere from a fine taper to a broad streak. Hence the basis of our brush calligraphy.
An expert Gongbi artist shows the craft by presenting flowing lines of uniform width and intensity with no hiccups or kinks at all. The attached photo is an example of bad Gongbi skills. The lines are not uniform at all and they are rough and not pleasing to look at. The student would get a fail grade.
Thus the first step of creating a Gongbi style painting is to create a workable outline drawing. This is when the artist stages and poses whatever subject matters into the painting. I suppose one can look at that as a stencil, upon which a piece of translucent sized Xuan or silk from art supply stores is placed, and the artist can now trace the stencil with that long slender line brush. Typically Gongbi students always copy the stencils provided by their teachers.
The painting I have in mind to paint is this fashion is the same one I did recently; the colorful one with the ducks in a pond.
Since I have to work out the stencil myself, I would cheat by basing it on a painting that is mine and is already in existence. I just have this obsession about all the different reflections in my pond painting and I think these reflections are interesting mosaic material. As I delve into my thought process and mental preparation I realize that each of these shimmers and wiggly lines could be a piece of the mosaic tile and therefore I would be dealing with formulating hundreds of tiny pieces. A most daunting task.
Since I haven't made any New Year's resolutions yet, I shall resolute to attempt this seemingly tedious project. I think the challenge that this could be laborious motivates me. I am reminded of these paint-by-numbers coloring books that are sold in craft stores. The ones that are for kids 12 years and older can be very complicated, with lots of numbers to sort out and paint in. Often times one does not know what one is painting without first looking at the key and the finished picture to get a sense.
I am taking my time but keep a steady foot on the gas pedal and begin in earnest to plot my stencil of outlines. For my stencil I am using a brush pen. It is much easier to handle, especially for the purpose of making dark lines quickly and succinctly.
It is hypnotizing to figure out all these "tiles" and frankly this is not as bad as I thought it would be. Perhaps it is my OCD, I frankly do not sense the passage of time. Whenever I want to take a break, I keep thinking of the next wiggle, the next "tile". Just one more, I told myself. Obviously having my original painting as a "stencil" to work from helps immensely. I just hope that I can make sense of all these lines, all these little enclosures. I can always refer back to my original painting if I am lost, as I reassure myself. It is also surreptitiously comforting to know, perhaps, that by having this "stencil", I could do an iteration of my ducks in a pond. That hasn't crossed my mind before until now.
Sunday, January 22, 2023
Friday, January 20, 2023
Finishing up my Jade Rabbits on the Moon
Now that I have the main residents situated on the moon, it is time to paint in the background. As I had alluded to before, the inspiration for this composition is the mythology of the shadows on the moon representing the dwelling of Chang'e and her rabbit. I am therefore needing to exploit the shadows. I am choosing to paint a classical pine tree with its branches matching the shadows. I am also placing the branches strategically so that they take up and blend in with some of the bigger pieces of fibers on the paper.
Monday, January 16, 2023
Launching my Year of the Rabbit painting
I am feeling comfortable about my rabbits and the 22nd of January will be here before long so I better step on the gas and put some rabbits down on paper for real, or else I won't have a greeting card for Chinese New Year.
When I think of the astrological Rabbit I inevitably look to the moon. I suppose this has to do with my culture and what is instilled in me. I grow up learning about the legend of Chang'e, our goddess of the moon, and the rabbit is her faithful companion up there.
In our Chinese mythology, it was said that there used to be ten suns and they were causing unbearable heat to our world. Chang'e was married to an archer, who went out and shot down 9 suns, leaving just the one we see today. For his valiant effort he was given an elixir of immortality by the Emperor of the Heaven. He didn't wish to be immortal all by himself so he gave the elixir to his wife Chang'e for safe-keeping. One day someone was trying to steal the elixir and Chang'e in an attempt to prevent the elixir from falling into wrong hands, drank all the elixir herself. She thus became immortal and chose the moon as her residence, leaving her husband behind. The Emperor of the Heaven caught wind of this and granted Chang'e the ability to meet her husband annually, on the 8th full moon of the year. Hence the August Moon Festival. A quick check on the internet shows there are many versions of this legend and what I am telling might sound different from what other people have learned. I suppose the only real significance is that we believe Chang'e is the goddess of the moon, and the rabbit keeps her company.
I suppose it is not difficult to conjure up stories about beings on the moon, especially when the moon surface is represented by unknown shadows and shapes. That floating luminous object that changes from a ball to a sliver in the night sky is in itself an object of pondering and bewilderment. I need to confess, the music of Rusalka's "Song to the Moon" is playing as I am writing. It is also interesting that the same moon appears different when viewed from different parts of the world.
I took a picture of a full moon in the States: