A Unique Line: Difference between revisions

From XPUB & Lens-Based wiki
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 6: Line 6:
|Website=http://chenjunyu.org/
|Website=http://chenjunyu.org/
|Catalog-Text1=  
|Catalog-Text1=  
Line is the raw material of drawing. Each line records the unique movement of the artist actual presence.
To speak about the natural truth of the process of drawing the movement of making strokes on paper, is not a single­track activity, it is interactive. The roughness of paper, the sound generated by the friction between paper and pen point, and the continuing change created by the lines which reflects to whole drawing, somehow triggers artist to make the next step and influence her decision making. “Each stroke had to be a decision and was answered by a new question.” (Rosenberg, 1952)
 
|Catalog-Text2=
This minimal act of drawing becomes meaningful for me through time. The continuous action gains the control to draw. It is a meditative process while trying to fully focus on holding the brush and regular breathing. I feel directly perceived through the senses that I am tracing the lines. I like this minimal way for creation, because the simplicity for expression, it leaves a lot “empty space” for viewer to imagine.
道教
|Catalog-Text3=
 
 


|Description=
|Description=
Why to draw, here and now?


“Nature presents our eyes with colored surfaces to which painted areas of pigment may correspond, and with inflected surfaces to which sculptural surfaces may correspond. But nowhere does it present our eyes with the lines and the relationships between lines which are the raw material of drawing.” (Philip Rawson,Drawing). Drawing expresses the artist’s individual perception and produces a statement to the world by depicted lines. The underlying movements of the lines is the concrete documentation of this narrative. This work visualises the movements of “making” emphasing the lively and personal process of the drawing.


What a drawing line is telling?


}}


 
<gallery>
 
File:line copy.jpg
 
File:DSC06559_copy.jpg
 
</gallery>
 
Most of the art education I have been through has tried to force me copy others’ symbols within drawing, especially when I was very young. My example may be extreme, but everyday we are going through varying degrees of visual assimilation, such as advertisements. In a way, these symbols also construct the reality surrounding us, yet we are limited by this common symbology which is intended to make the connection between "self" and the world. We read this world directly by images. If these symbols narrows the possibilities of reading the world, does it also narrow our understanding about the world?<br/>This work is a combination of past experience and new starts, copied visual expression, and the creation from self-cognition. [[File:DSC06559_copy.jpg|700px]]
 
}}

Latest revision as of 16:37, 13 February 2017

A Unique Line
Creator Junyu Chen
Year 2015
Bio Junyu CHEN (1990, China) is an artist using video and drawing as her main tool for self-analysis to address the visual language we communicate with. She has a specific enthusiasm for depicting the process of drawing physically and conceptually, and into the way we question the current state of drawing.
Thumbnail
Line copy.jpg
Website http://chenjunyu.org/

Why to draw, here and now?

“Nature presents our eyes with colored surfaces to which painted areas of pigment may correspond, and with inflected surfaces to which sculptural surfaces may correspond. But nowhere does it present our eyes with the lines and the relationships between lines which are the raw material of drawing.” (Philip Rawson,Drawing). Drawing expresses the artist’s individual perception and produces a statement to the world by depicted lines. The underlying movements of the lines is the concrete documentation of this narrative. This work visualises the movements of “making” emphasing the lively and personal process of the drawing.