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
Thursday, April 11, 2024
Attempting a classical landscape painting
Thursday, March 21, 2024
Thank You Singapore-for my New Dawn
Seeing that my scheme of applying a mask, as if I was working with Photoshop, to my painting could transform my work drastically, I told myself, "Game on, baby!"
I discussed my mischievous intentions with a friend of mine and he accused me of cheating.
Really? This had not crossed my mind at all. Perhaps I had accepted Photoshop as an acceptable post-production in the workflow of taking pictures, and I had embraced the concept of layers and masking. Perhaps to a purist, this is considered cheating. I wonder if this is a by-product and necessary evil of digital photography. Anyways, my conscience is clear. Novel, perhaps; cheating, no.
My "test subject" is now ready for the experiment. I am using the same home cooked starch that I use for mounting on paper for this attempt. I use a soft brush to brush on my rising sun "mask" due to the thin and delicate nature of the cicada skin Xuan. I really don't want to tear it.
The cicada skin Xuan now sits on top of the starched original painting that was mounted on cement board. Careful and swift brushing ensures a flat and wrinkle free application.
Newspaper is used to cover the newly starched work and a brush with stiff bristles is pounded on top of the newspaper. This serves to force a tight bonding of the cicada skin Xuan to the painting underneath and the newspaper also helps to absorb moisture from the wet starch that seeps through the Xuan paper.
This is now allowed to dry at ambient room temperature. The saturation and transparency will diminish as the drying process continues.
Liquitex gloss medium and varnish is now applied to the dried painting. The Liquitex helps to restore the brilliancy for the color and acts as a protective coating. This is especially critical since I will be displaying the work without a glass covering. I am allowing the liquid to sit on selected spots a while longer before dispersing it to surrounding areas. The liquid seems to have helped bring out the transparency for the selected areas.
I get the following result after some minor touchups. This is now allowed to dry.
With matting now,
In the interest of documenting this transformation, I created the following composite,
Nobody likes my newborn baby. Everybody prefers the third iteration. They think that is a "real painting" and that it is "prettier".
I, on the other hand, do like the last version very much. In fact, I would go as far to call that a metamorphosis. The literal details of the original are distilled to almost a tactile experience. The sorghum has fermented. It is now crude and raw and in your face. I can feel the sun and its halo of colors. Or is it my cataract that is clouding up my vision. I can no longer call my piece a Huangshan sunrise because any discernable landmark is no longer. It can be universal, wherever trees populate. Had I not taken the trip to Singapore, I would not have such a revelation.
So, Thank You Singapore, for my New Dawn.
Friday, March 8, 2024
Sunrise at Huangshan
I recently took a trip to Singapore. I wanted to experience Lau Pa Sat (old market) and I wasn't disappointed at all. But that is not the reason for writing this blog.
As I was packed in the middle isle in the back of the belly of a 777, I pretty much had no vantage point of the view outside of the plane. Well the blinds were all closed anyways so the passengers could spill "Z"s at 40K feet. So I wasn't missing much. Then one of the passengers sitting by a window raised the window blind. The cabin was immediately bathed with a streak of reddish amber light, arcing across the walls of the dimmed economy class holding pen, as the plane floats across the thin air.
The sun was rising.
I stretched my neck and yawed my head, trying to maintain a line of sight to the rising sun outside the window, sidestepping the dark silhouettes of passengers' heads. I was trying to absorb that image as much as I could. I know it would be futile for me to take a picture with my phone, I would probably end up with a little amber oval amidst a dark field of heads. The glow was so encompassing, I felt its presence more than simply seeing it.
I found my old "run of the mill" piece of Huangshan after I returned home. A piece that I did years ago, honing my painting skill. I wanted to revive that painting by making the sun come up from behind those rock formations.
Yes, that encounter with the rising sun from inside a plane had done something to my psyche.
Thursday, February 22, 2024
Two finches in a pear tree
Christmas has come and gone but the proverbial Twelve Days of Christmas song somehow keeps playing in my head.
On the first day of Christmas my true love sent to me a partridge in a pear tree
On the second day of Christmas my true love sent to me two turtle doves, and a partridge in a pear tree
I am reminded by the lyrics of my painting of pear tree flowers. I have always loved that simple painting and to me it demonstrates the merits of Chinese round brush painting, although one would not associate it with the "traditional" Chinese brush painting. Everything in that painting was done with discrete calligraphic brushstrokes, as if I was writing multitudes of "dots". On top of that, it was sort of a plein-air painting. I sat in the backyard, writing all dots as blossoms from my pear tree. With that said, I've always felt that something was missing. It lacked a story. It lacked a plot.
How about borrowing from the Christmas carol and place a couple of finches in my pear tree. I don't have partridges in my backyard but I do see finches.
I don't want to make my finches too ostentatious. The finches I see usually betray their presence by their chirping or by their flickering, seldom by their colors. The black-head finch, or the yellow-body variety would blend in too much with my painting of pear tree flowers. I mean, I do want my finches to be sort of obscure, but not to the extent of puzzles like "Where's Waldo" ( aka Where's Wally ). I think the red-head finch best fit my purpose. They use the color of their red head as calling cards, but their bodies blend in pretty well with their surroundings.
This looks like a good spot to hang out,
Friday, February 9, 2024
Friday, February 2, 2024
Water and dragon
I am running out of time to carry out my tradition of doing a painting for the Chinese New Year. I do that for self amusement and I also render the painting into a digital greeting card so I can send it out to my friends and family. Eventually I hope to have a collection of all the 12 Zodiac animals.
Dragon is the protagonist for the upcoming New Year. I am reminded of an old saying that proclaims "the water doesn't need to be deep; it will have spiritual energy if a dragon resides in it" "水不在深, 有龍則靈". Thus I am ruminating my thoughts around that theme.
Obviously the first thing is to try and paint water. My hypothesis is that the dragon would be fierce, and it is not going to be doing a free style swim, but more like a butterfly stroke.
So the water should be splashing and churning.
I am trying to augment the void spaces by drawing in white lines using a white gel pen.
Thursday, February 1, 2024
Family Zodiac completed
Finally I wrapped up on the Family Zodiac project.
Whether the finished product has artistic value or not is beside the point. I'm sure it appears to be utilitarian or commercial, but the appeal of the painting is in its meaning. Obviously I am prejudiced since I understand the nuances.
So the painting follows the doctrines of I Ching, where Tai Chi produces 2 Instruments, represented by the Dragon and the Snake. The 2 Instruments produces 4 Images, comprised of a Rat, a Rooster, a Hen and a Baby Ox. These 6 animals happen to be the constituents of the family I am doing the painting for.
The Snake is fashioned in the shape of the word Loh, our family name, in cursive.
The cosmic swirls emanate from the two complementary/opposing energies, modeled with the proverbial Tai Chi or Ying Yang insignia. In the swirls one finds a purple haze. The significance of the purple haze is that it represents imminent auspicious events.
The recipient of the Zodiac painting is a Rat, thus I was going to print my New Year Rat painting on a piece of white silk as an added memento. Unfortunately I didn't know what print setting to use so the color came out awful. I grabbed my brush and color and painted over the printed areas. That was fun and was easier since all I had to do was to cover up the dreadful colors. I decided to use gold acrylic for the writing instead of ink. This actually reminded me of the practice of photo saloons coloring black and white portrait photo prints in the old days. Perhaps I could find a job doing that.
Just as I was going to close the books on this project, I remembered that I had made a seal for myself in the past; a toy chop if you will. I had a friend whose hobby was into clay and ceramics and she had her own electric kiln. I used some of her clay remnants and fashioned a seal for myself. It showed the Big Dipper housed in a hulu gourd. The gourd is omnipresent in our culture, not only as a vessel for storage, but also as a symbol of medicine and an extractor of negative energy. In short, it is an auspicious object.
For the astute Chinese readers, the seal that I use for a lot of my paintings says 大熊 (great bear). My dad named his children after the stars in the Big Dipper, the Ursa Major; so we all borne the name of a star in the Ursa Major. Fortunately my dad did not have more than 7 children. My siblings and I were all addressed as bears ( as in Great Bear constellation) as a way of endearment. Our legal name was strictly for the school and government use. Hence the significance of my using the Big Dipper as a seal. I am paying homage to my dad and my family.