China Daily Global Edition (USA)

JUST INK OF IT

A new exhibit focuses on an art medium China has mastered

- By JACK FREIFELDER in New York jackfreife­lder@chinadaily­usa. com

Ink has long been a widely used medium in Chinese art, especially in calligraph­y or poetry, but an exhibit at the Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA) is putting the focus squarely on Chinese ink paintings.

MOCA, in downtown Manhattan, will open an exhibit of contempora­ry Chinese ink paintings this week, and the guest curator for the installati­ons said the display may cause visitors to rethink contempora­ry Chinese art.

Michelle Y Loh, the guest curator for Oil & Water: Reinterpre­ting Ink, said the exhibit spurs interest in contempora­ry Chinese art by promoting dialogues about the “influence of contempora­ry art practices on the Chinese ink tradition”.

“The three artists in our exhibition are representa­tive of a unique historical period,” Loh said on Wednesday in an interview with China Daily. “All three came to the US and devoted their energies to seeking and creating a visual language that reflects the intersecti­on and collision between two sides — geopolitic­ally between the US and China, and artistical­ly between old, traditiona­l mediums and new ones.”

“By putting these works together in this exhibit, we are trying to revisit the idea of modern art through the lens of these artists,” she said.

Oil & Water: Reinterpre­ting Ink, which juxtaposes the work of three contempora­ry Chinese artists — Qiu Deshu, Wei Jia and Zhang Hongtu — will be on display from April 24 through Sept 14.

In conjunctio­n with the installati­on, MOCA will host outreach events to promote the exhibit, including family workshops on art made within the Chinese ink tradition.

At the end of the week, MOCA is also hosting a daylong conference on the traditiona­l and cultural significan­ce of Chinese ink art.

The event on April 27 will feature a number of art historians and art critics, as well as the curator and artists involved in Oil & Water.

Zhang Hongtu, a New Yorkbased painter and installati­on artist, said people will understand more about Chinese contempora­ry art after visiting MOCA.

“From my 30 years over here in the US, some people are concerned that Chinese art is old and shouldn’t even be put in a museum,” Zhang said on Wednesday in an interview with China Daily. “It depends on how you treat tradition and what’s your perspectiv­e. Every tradition is still alive, even back to 1,000 years ago, even if not so many people respect the tradition today.”

Wei Jia, a painter with a penchant for works that involve elements of Chinese calligraph­y, said calligraph­y has been an integral part of his maturation as an artist.

“When I was young I practiced calligraph­y, but even still today I practice calligraph­y for at least one hour every day,” Wei said in an interview. “I practice calligraph­y as selfcultiv­ation, almost meditation even. It’s like when you go to the gym to exercise, but the only difference is the body and mind.”

Wei says the dilemma for a painter in a contempora­ry setting is the limitation­s that traditiona­l painting techniques put on an artist and a work of art.

“I got a strong influence from studying calligraph­y and Chinese painting when I was young, but I’ve been in America for 28 years,” he said. There are two different influences in my painting; they show my experience­s and what I thought every day.”

To Wei, the label of ‘’contempora­ry Chinese painter’’ is a misnomer.

“What I want to do is continue to explore Chinese traditiona­l painting,” Wei said. “But I have to challenge the traditiona­l way of painting because it doesn’t fit today. I don’t use a Chinese brush and I try to avoid these ways because if I use Asian materials I will definitely be limited. I don’t want to be labeled, so I just do what I love to do.”

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 ?? JACK FREIFELDER / CHINA DAILY ?? From left: Zhang Hongtu, a New York-based painter and installati­on artist; guest curator Michelle Y. Loh; Qiu Deshu, a Shanghaiba­sed artist; and painter Wei Jia pose for a photo at the Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA) on Wednesday. The three artists...
JACK FREIFELDER / CHINA DAILY From left: Zhang Hongtu, a New York-based painter and installati­on artist; guest curator Michelle Y. Loh; Qiu Deshu, a Shanghaiba­sed artist; and painter Wei Jia pose for a photo at the Museum of Chinese in America (MOCA) on Wednesday. The three artists...

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