Culture

Yang adds modern touch to ink

By Xiao Xiangyi ( China Daily ) Updated: 2014-07-15 10:20:50

 

Yang adds modern touch to ink

The Weekend (2002), ink-and-wash by Yang Ermin.

Yang adds modern touch to ink

 

Inking a new future

Yang adds modern touch to ink

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Traditional Chinese painting - especially ink-and-wash painting - has not taken too many local artists to the global arena. For centuries, their work centered around contrasting black with white and light with dark using varying densities of black ink. The artists have consciously or unconsciously worked toward finding a "way out" for their craft.

But Yang Ermin, 50, has shown how the art form can thrive by giving it a modern touch. He has added unconventional splashes of bright color to traditional ink-and-wash paintings.

An exhibition of Yang's new ink paintings, titled The Dream of the Future, opened on July 5 in Lodeve, a town in the Languedoc-Roussillon region of southern France.

Unlike the more durable canvas that is able to carry thicker layers of oil paint, rice paper used in ink painting is delicate and much less absorbent. It can easily be smudged or torn when painted with colors.

Yang likened his search for a new technique to get color on rice paper to that of a farmer experimenting in the field to find a new way to grow a crop. He "buried his head in rice paper", he says.

"This ancient country of mine has actually contributed very little to the art world, in modern times," says Yang, who was born in Hebei province and studied art since childhood.

He says that he often ponders over how ancient Chinese culture can be better shared with everyone.

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