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June 21, 2018

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Experimenting with Eastern and Western influences

A solo exhibition featuring a fusion of East-meets-West ink-wash paintings is currently underway at the Liu Haisu Art Museum.

Xu Jinping, vice chairman of Shanxi Artists Association, who has been involved in traditional ink-wash paintings for over four decades, loves to mix the application of colors in combining Western oil painting and the Oriental art genre. 

The subjects under Xu’s brushstrokes vary from landscapes to birds and flowers. He is particularly enamored with Taihang Mountain. 

The mountain, running down the eastern edge of the Loess Plateau in Shanxi, Henan and Hebei provinces, was a base for the Communist Party of China during the War of Resistance Against Japanese Aggression (1931-45). 

Its towering peaks, deep gorges, waterfalls and spectacular caves also gave birth to the ancient style of landscape painting. 

Jing Hao (AD 850-923), considered as “father of China’s panorama landscape painting,” lived a reclusive life on Taihang Mountain to conjure up with his masterpieces.

Xu skillfully used magnolia flower to offset the grandeur and power usually displayed by other artists. It unwittingly adds some elegance and softness in his works.

 

Date: Through June 30 (closed on Monday), 10am-4pm

Venue: Liu Haisu Art Museum

Address: 1609 Yan’an Rd W.




 

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