China Daily Global Edition (USA)

GIFTS OF A LIFETIME

A longtime friend and admirer shares his collected works of Xiong Bingming with the world with his donation to a Beijing museum. Lin Qi reports.

- Yang Zhenning, Nobel Prize winner in physics Contact the writer at linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Yang Zhenning (Chen-Ning Franklin Yang), 94, and Xiong Bingming (Ping-Ming Hsiung, 19222002) knew each other since they were 7 years old.

Both their fathers were prominent mathematic­ians and professors at Tsinghua University in Beijing. The two families were neighbors for eight years.

The boys went to same elementary and secondary schools and stuck together all the time. They both graduated from National Southweste­rn Associated University in Kunming, Southwest China’s Yunnan province, in the 1940s.

Yang later went to the United States, and the physicist became the first Chinese to win a Nobel Prize in 1957. Xiong pursued PhD studies in philosophy in France in 1947, but a year later, he transferre­d to study sculpture and became a Paris-based artist.

Although living on different continents, the two maintained a long friendship. Xiong gave many of his sculptures to Yang, among which there is one bronze piece, Penholder, specially made for Yang in the late 1950s and bearing both their initials on the back.

On Friday, Yang and his wife Weng Fan donated the sculpture to the National ArtMuseum of China in Beijing, where Xiong held a retrospect­ive exhibition in 1999. He also donated another two of Xiong’s bronze works, Horse and Camel, both produced in the late 1950s.

The three works demonstrat­e Xiong’s distinguis­hed approach to sculpture. He fragmented iron or bronze sheets into smaller pieces, and welded them into forms. The complete works have various enclosures formed by these chips, which according to Yang, become a feature of Xiong’s output.

Yang says the approach was popular among artists in Britain and France in the 1950s andXiong was a pioneer of the developmen­t.

“Xiong was an achiever in philosophy and art. He was also a calligraph­er. His research inChinese art infuses his great attainment in both Chinese and Western cultures,” Yang said at the donation ceremony.

Xiong’s interest in sculpture was ignited after meeting French sculptor Marcel Gimond shortly after he arrived in Paris. He was impressed by Gimond’s works and began studying art with him.

Xiong entered the prestigiou­s National School of Fine Arts inParis in 1950. He taught at the University of Paris beginning in the mid-1960s until he retired in 1989. During the time he also drew, painted, sculpted and practiced calligraph­y. He published several books, introducin­g Chinese art from aWestern perspectiv­e.

He visited the Chinese mainland many times from the late 1970s, giving lectures and exhibiting. He also left some creations here, including Ru Zi Niu, a cow sculpture that kneels on its forelegs and raises its head high. Xiong crafted it in the 1980s with the assistance of Wu Weishan, now the director of NAMOC and then a young sculptor.

InChinese, “ruziniu” means a person serving the people wholeheart­edly and unselfishl­y. Yang once said the sculpture summarizes “a whole generation of China’s intellectu­als of the 20th century”. It is installed in the campus of Nanjing University, in East China’s Jiangsu province.

In 1998, Xiong was commission­ed to sculpt a head of Lu Xun (1881-1936), the famed author and translator, by the Beijing-based National Museum ofModern Chinese Literature. Yang says that in the work, Xiong gave a full expression of the literary figure’s honesty and uprightnes­s.

Yang says one of his favorite pieces is a woman’s head

Xiong was an achiever in philosophy and art. ...His research in Chinese art infuses his great attainment in both Chinese and Western cultures.”

sculpture that Xiong modeled after his mother; it shows “a temperamen­t that can be felt in all mothers”, Yang says.

He adds that Xiong created many bird sculptures as well, and Yang owns one which he loves too much to include it in the donation.

On the same day, NAMOC also received a donation of three calligraph­ic pieces of Yu Youren (1879-1964), an educator, scholar and politician who is famous for his excellence in calligraph­y.

They were donated by Zhu Yilong, a Beijing-based entreprene­ur and calligraph­y collector.

Born in Northwest China’s Shaanxi province, Yu learned calligraph­y from stone rubbings featuring writings that date back to the NorthernWe­i Dynasty (386-534). Gradually he focused on the practice of caoshu or the cursive-style script.

Yu moved to Taiwan in 1949. His calligraph­ic works are sought by many collectors.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Yang Zhenning (second from right) and his wife Weng Fan receive a donation certificat­e from Luo Shugang (second from left), Minister of Culture, and Wu Weishan, director of the National Art Museum of China.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Yang Zhenning (second from right) and his wife Weng Fan receive a donation certificat­e from Luo Shugang (second from left), Minister of Culture, and Wu Weishan, director of the National Art Museum of China.
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 ??  ?? Xiong Bingming’s sculptures which have been donated to the National Art Museum of China.
Xiong Bingming’s sculptures which have been donated to the National Art Museum of China.

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