China Daily

Artist lets wood speak for itself

Zhou Ning, an artist who lives in rural China, is presenting his wood art in Beijing. Deng Zhangyu reports.

- Contact the writer at dengzhangy­u@ chinadaily.com.cn

For about 20 years, Zhou Ning has lived in the countrysid­e in East China’s Shandong province, dedicating himself to one thing — chiseling blocks of wood.

The 48-year-old artist seldom visits cities unless he has to. But he came to Beijing at the end of October for the start of his solo show at the Yilian Art Center.

The ongoing show, entitled True Words: Carving a Path to Self Cultivatio­n, features 28 pieces of woodcuts, among which the heaviest is up to 150 kilograms.

Unlike many other woodcuts that focus on carving out delicate patterns or making the surface smooth, Zhou’s works show how he moves cutting tools through wood.

“Everything has a soul. I can feel it when I touch the wood,” he says.

Every time Zhou selects a block, he brings out his tools to feel the fibers.

Zhu Xuchu, an art critic who has known Zhou for a decade, says the artist treats every piece of wood as a living creature, “letting them speak for themselves” based on each block’s shape, hardness and color.

Zhou has created a unique world of woodcarvin­g, using wood as a medium to present his moods through his skillful cutting techniques, Zhu adds.

Zhou’s studio is in Shiqiao village, not far away from the Taishan Mountain in Shandong.

The artist’s works also connote Taoism, a subject he is fond of.

Speaking of his life in the countrysid­e, Zhou explains it’s cheap to have a big studio and collect materials needed for his work.

More important, the noise made by woodcarvin­g does not disturb others as Zhou usually works at night and sometimes until early morning. During the day, he guides his apprentice­s with physical disabiliti­es. Some of them have worked with him for years.

In 1995, Zhou graduated from Shandong College of Arts in Jinan and taught art at a special polytechni­c school for people with hearing and speaking disabiliti­es.

“All students were eager to learn a craft to make a living. I taught them woodcarvin­g because it was an affordable craft for them,” he says.

Zhou majored in mural painting in college and had hoped to be an oil painter one day. But while teaching his students woodcarvin­g, he found their gift and decided to keep developing their potential, as well as build on his own skills.

In 1997, Zhou and his students held a show at the National Art Museum of China and made a big splash. But many students’ parents stopped them from further studying because they thought art was useless when one was hardly able to make a living.

For many years, Zhou himself lived in poverty. Along with his students, he lived a simple life in the rural areas and continued on the artistic path.

He made various cutting tools himself to carve out sharp lines, sweeping curves and hollowed-out parts in wood, day after day.

“The carving knives for me are just like pens. Very easy to master the skills after decades of practice,” he says.

It’s common for him to spend several years on one piece. If he lost the inspiratio­n to carry on with a work, he would stop and wait for months and even years to resume.

“There are lots of unfinished works piled up in my studio. A good piece needs time and patience. Also it needs my sincerity to treat them,” he says.

But each time he has had to move from village to village, mostly due to the developmen­t of cities near them, it takes dozens of trucks to transport all his unfinished pieces.

After his first solo show was held in Shanghai in 2015, collectors started to visit his studio in Shandong and buy his works.

The show in Beijing is his second solo show with works produced in the past few years. When displaying his work at the Beijing show, Zhou wore a pair of cloth shoes and carried his tools in an oversized cloth bag.

“It needs power to carve out a heavy piece. Sometimes my students assist me,” says Zhou.

He refuses to use electronic tools, which he says break wood in a mechanical way.

“When I touch a piece of wood, I can sense what it has, and I know how much I need to cut and where to cut,” he explains.

Zhou is a man of few words. He communicat­es with his apprentice­s in sign language and spends most of his time in the countrysid­e, away from the clamor of cities.

Han Yingxue, curator of the show, says Zhou’s wood pieces speak to the “inner mind of a man concentrat­ing on his art without interventi­on from the outside world”.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Zhou Ning has devoted the past two decades to the art of woodcarvin­g. His solo show, True Words: Carving a Path to Self Cultivatio­n, is now being held in Beijing.
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Zhou Ning has devoted the past two decades to the art of woodcarvin­g. His solo show, True Words: Carving a Path to Self Cultivatio­n, is now being held in Beijing.
 ??  ?? The Spring and Autumn series by Zhou Ning.
The Spring and Autumn series by Zhou Ning.
 ??  ?? The Wind series, woodcarvin­g by Zhou Ning.
The Wind series, woodcarvin­g by Zhou Ning.

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