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          Art legend made white the new black

          Updated: 2013-05-19 07:50

          By Zhao Ruixue(China Daily)

            Print Mail Large Medium  Small

          Art legend made white the new black

           Art legend made white the new black

          Taiwan artist Liu Kuo-sung, 81, brings a fresh approach to applying ink and color. Above is his work Rondo. Provided to China Daily

          Art legend made white the new black

          When the wind blew into his studio in 1963 and flipped one of his sketches over onto the floor, it turned a new page for Liu Kuo-sung's painting career.

          The Taiwan artist was inspired to break the spell of the traditional black lines that had long shaped Chinese painting.

          "I'd been experimenting with all different kinds of art materials, even toilet paper. One day when I came back to my studio I noticed the lantern paper on which I brushed was blown face-down onto the floor."

          Liu picked up the paper, and to his surprise, the back side of this sketch presented a painting he had aspired to create for two years.

          "The rough fibers on the lantern paper blocked the ink, so on the back of the paper, where there are rough fibers the lines were white," Liu explained.

          Liu found a factory to make a kind of rough cotton paper, which could add the white linear effect to his painting. The paper is now known as "Liu Kuo-sung paper" in Taiwan art shops, and the artist, now 81 years old, has been dubbed "the father of modern ink painting".

          The artist's works have been shown at the Palace Museum in Beijing and the Guggenheim in New York. A total of 87 world-renowned art galleries and museums including the British Museum have collected his works.

          Born in 1932 in Anhui, Liu started Chinese painting at the age of 14. Liu's father was a Kuomintang soldier who was killed in the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression (1937-45), and the young student was accepted by a school for military kids at the age of 16.

          He moved to Taiwan in 1949 with the school. Two years later Liu was accepted by the art department of Taiwan Normal University. There he learned formal Chinese painting, but he turned to Western art in his sophomore year.

          In 1960, however, Liu decided there was no point in blindly following the trends of Western art. He says he wanted to enrich traditional Chinese art - which he thought had been stagnating since the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368).

          "We are eager about modernizing our economy," Liu says, "but we ignore the update of our culture."

          So he began to revolutionize traditional painting techniques.

          He then invented the collage and marbling techniques that can create special textures to his works. But it was the invention of "Liu Kuo-sung paper" that made his painting distinctive, earning him a place in many famous art galleries around the world.

          With this paper, Liu created Clouds Know No Emptiness in 1963. It was his first painting that would be collecting by museum, the Hong Kong Museum of Art.

          As his artistic exploration continued, he developed such techniques as water rubbing and steeped ink.

          Experts say Liu's innovative techniques invert the traditional techniques of Chinese ink paintings, which use black to outline objects, with white representing voids and empty spaces.

          Liu's new approaches created a style that combines the traditional with the modern.

          "Liu spent 40 years creating a new artistic language by importing Western artistic concepts into classical Chinese culture," said Michael Goedhuis, curator of London's Michael Goedhuis Gallery.

          In 2011, Liu was honored with the Lifetime Achievement Award of the Chinese Art and Literature Award from the Ministry of Culture in China.

          Liu has donated 81 paintings to the Shandong Provincial Museum, making the museum the largest holder of his art.

          "He was opposed by both the traditional school and the modern school when he turned back to Chinese painting and tried to add new elements," says Lee Mohua, Liu's wife.

          "But he held out and proved he was right."

          zhaoruixue@chinadaily.com.cn

          (China Daily 05/19/2013 page4)

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