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Gao had an intense childhood art education in mainland
China focusing
on European-style drawing and oil painting. This
special background makes him the most renowned ink wash painter
as he successfully blend
Western format in Oriental culture and his stories in his art. His pictures occupy
nearly the full frame of the paper, and, echoing his life as a teller of tales,
each painting is a story. From his artworks we can feel loneliness and everything
he has gone through in his life. It is usually depicted in his ink wash
paintings stands a man facing the sea on a mountainous object. Once a refugee
from China he flee from Beijing’s control after the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown. He was forced to destruct his work and while most
of his work was banned in China. He later exiled to France and become a citizen
there. 
Gao received his first lesson
of oil painting in high school. In1978 when he had a chance to visit
the Louvre, he was deeply impressed by Western
masterpieces. Since the Renaissance, the western paintings were so unbeatable and he
thought it was difficult to transcend the West. When seeing the ink paintings of
Picasso, he thought the Westerns cannot master the layers of ink well, which later gave rise to his whim
of blending the East and West. Ever since the Tang and Song dynasties, the development of Chinese
ink paintings has
been fully fledged and it was
less likely to make a breakthrough. Meanwhile, admitting that it was meaningless to copy the West, he tried to
paint the rice paper with ink. Although ink wash
painting was not something new, it carried boarder meanings in Chinese.Not
simply creating appearance of the objects, but to capture its soul
as well as temperament and liveliness. 
Knowing so much about modern Western art, Gao has finely
appreciated the importance given to the physical act of painting, the
exploration on pictorial materiality, and specially, the autonomous status of
painting. The artworks exude a fluid technique and spontaneous overflow, with
lightly brushstrokes, by means of which he explores the painterly possibilities
of ink. White and black, light and shadow, achieve a great variety of
tonalities, giving a sensual and poetic effect full of texture. The success of Gao’s ink wash painting should be
attributed to his emphasis on his own self-reflection. The pictures
fluctuate between figurative and abstract painting, depicting images that in a
broader sense remind of landscapes and inner worlds, as well as cosmic
processes inspired by the artists’ reflections on the complexity of the human existence. He puts the emphasis on the subtle play of light and
shadow, flat surfaces exuding a three-dimensional depth 
La sérénité, 2011 Indian ink on canvas 
200x300 cm Gao Xingjian said his painting is like the heart of self and the inner landscape and a fresh painting language. He was once deprived of freedom. When reporters asked about what is the most valuable things in life, he immediately replied with a word freedom. From most of his paintings, we may feel how lonely he was separate from others and how strong his eagerness was to embrace the sky. Seeing the same landscapes and figures, the outcomes may vary across the viewers’ attitudes at the moment. With reference to the La sérénité(Serenity), the ink applied on the sun is very shallow and the direction of ink flows represents the sun rays out flowing from the centre of the sun. Looking at the bottom part of the painting was a mountain rising or a cliff enclosing, a liquid dispersal of ink resembling the distance of the objects where the blackness fades out gradually from the right. The focus of the painting stands a man facing the mountains. Being the centre of the painting, Gao applied the darkest layers of ink on the man whose posture shows resemblance to the Wanderer above the sea of mist by German Romantic artist Caspar David Friedrich. 
Wanderer above the sea of mist,1818 
Oil on canvas 
98.4x74.8 cm 
It is evident that Gao
XingJian’s paintings are heavily influenced by the Romanticism which stresses
on the
importance of
the free expression of the artists’ feelings. The importance the
Romantics placed on untrammeled feeling is summed up in the remark of the
German painter Caspar David Friedrich that "the artist's feeling is his
law". To
William Wordsworth poetry should be "the spontaneous overflow of powerful
feelings". In order to truly express these feelings, the content of the
art must come from the imagination of the artist, with as little interference
as possible from "artificial" rules dictating what a work should
consist of. The philosophies of these great pioneers are
compatible with the belief of Gao XingJian and his abstract paintings can be summarized
as the strong
influence of the Eastern Figurative techniques combined to the big passion for
Western Contemporary Painting 
However, in “Wanderer above
the sea of mist” stands a
young man upon a rocky precipice, his back to the viewers. He is wrapped in a dark
green overcoat, and grips a walking stick in his right hand. His hair caught in
a wind, the wanderer gazes out on a landscape covered in a thick sea of fog. In
the middle ground, several other ridges, perhaps not unlike the ones the
wanderer himself stands upon, jut out from the mass. Through the wreaths of
fog, forests of trees can be perceived atop these escarpments. In the far
distance, faded mountains rise in the left, gently leveling off into lowland
plains in the east. Beyond here, the pervading fog stretches out indefinitely,
eventually commingling with the horizon and becoming indistinguishable from the
cloud-filled sky. 
Wanderer above the Sea of Fog is true to the Romantic style and experts’ analysis was that the
message conveyed by the painting is one of Kantian self-reflection,
expressed through the wanderer's gazings into the murkiness of the sea of fog.
Others assert
that Wanderer presents a metaphor for the unknown future
and some felt
that the impression the wanderer's position atop the precipice and before the
twisted outlook leaves contradictory impression, suggesting at once
mastery over a landscape and the insignificance of the individual within it. Yes, the image emerges not from the material but from the viewer’s memory, the sensations the viewer associates with places. In art, we never reach consensus. The form and image could never tell the answer. Other Reference from Romanticism | |||


Reference:
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/06/11/arts/11iht-seno.1.13566297.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&
http://www.ipreciation.dreamhosters.com/test/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=13%3Agao-xingjian-&catid=12%3A-gao-xing-jian-&Itemid=2&lang=en
http://www.homabooks.com/general/books/east_asia/china/1007.php
http://www.palais-des-papes.com/anglais/expositions.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ink_wash_painting
http://www.torbandena.com/en/index.php?sez=expo&page=05a
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abstract_painting
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Romanticism
"GAO XINGJIAN-Return to Painting"
"另一種美學-高行健"
"Ink Paintings by Gao XingJian-Nobel Prize Winner"
"Darkness and Light-an exhibition of recent works by Gao XingJian"

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You've done very detail research on the biography, the piece selected and the reference. The description of the organization in the painting is very clear and well writen.
回覆刪除Just some suggestion for your final paper, you can cut down some biography of the artist as I think this is less important campare to the analysis of the art work.
For the analysis, you can further discuss how the use of colour (black and white) or the play of light and shadow help to create sense of space in the painting.
Besides, you may talk about your impression on the piece and your feeling about it to improve your final paper.
Hope this can help:)
Dear Theo,
回覆刪除You have a very good analysis on the mixture of Western and Chinese stylistic influences on the artist's work. One important aspect that you mentioned in your presentation is the idea of "capturing the unseen." The concept of freedom, and representing an imaginary landscape is what seems to connect the artist's work with classical styles. In your final paper, I would like to see a clearer statement on why you think this work is contemporary.