His art has truly gone to the dogs

Updated: 2011-10-08 11:21

By Zhu Linyong (China Daily)

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His art has truly gone to the dogs

Eclogue on the Grassland, oil on canvas by Lin Yue.

Oil artist Lin Yue recalls being terrified when the gigantic dog leapt for his throat with a "roar".

His horror melted into curiosity when the Tibetan mastiff halted its attack upon his master's command.

"I had never seen such beautiful but ferocious dogs," Lin says.

"I had never even heard of them, actually. Their appearances and behavior fascinated me, so I took photographs and studied them for hours that night."

The dogs provided the inspiration the Sichuan native was seeking, the quest for which had brought him to Sichuan's Aba Tibetan and Qiang autonomous prefecture. He made the trip in 2003, "desperately looking for a hideout for a wounded soul", after his restaurant business bottomed out.

Lin has since become the leader of the pack when it comes to painting Tibetan mastiffs.

He has consequently gotten bites from such buyers as media magnet Rupert Murdoch, billionaire investor Jim Rogers and American Jewish Congress chairman Jack Rosen.

Rosen, who met Lin in the US last summer during the artist's first overseas exhibition, said at the Sept 17 opening of Lin's retrospective solo exhibition in Beijing that the painter's US visit was a form of "Tibetan mastiff diplomacy" that helped Americans better understand China.

His art has truly gone to the dogs

The Beijing show displays more than 120 works, most of which are on loan from collectors from around the world.

"Lin not only paints a unique subject matter that arouses widespread interest but also does so with passion," Sichuan TV Station producer Liu Ling says.

"That might be why people from different backgrounds love his works."

Her documentary The Call, which tells the story of Lin and his "Tibetan mastiff friends", won a Golden Panda Award at the 10th Sichuan International TV Festival in 2009.

Lin says he is surprised by the acclaim.

His goal after graduating from the Sichuan Academy of Fine Arts in 1987 was to become a portrait painter.

"I would have ended up being a mediocre portraitist if I hadn't visited Aba," he says.

Lin was captivated by colorful ethnic cultures and decided to dwell among them to discover inspiration.

His encounter with the mastiff occurred on his first night in Aba and led him to devote his life to depicting these "lion-like dogs".

Italian adventurer Marco Polo described the mastiff as being as "tall as a donkey with a voice as powerful as that of a lion".

Lin travels throughout the Tibetan settlements of Sichuan, Qinghai and Gansu provinces and the Tibet autonomous region every year to photograph the people and their dogs.

The artist says he is most captivated by the mastiff's "loyalty to its owner, strong sense of duty and courage in the face of danger".

Owning one has nurtured a deeper understanding of the creatures, he says.

"The more I learn about this noble breed, the more I admire them," he says.

"I strive to paint mastiffs with emotional appeal."

He accomplishes this by using massive canvasses, tiny details and rough wilderness backdrops.

In Always by Your Side, Lin depicts a tearful mastiff sitting among earthquake ruins in Qinghai province's Yushu prefecture.

"The inspiration wasn't just my imagination," he says.

"In Yushu, I was told stories about mastiffs saving quake victims and shedding tears for those who didn't survive."

After its Beijing debut, Lin's solo exhibition travels to Paris and New York.