User:Chen Junyu/Graduation Project Seminar/ project proposal/1st

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Description for my work: "Water" Drawings help me think, and talk to myself. For the beginning of drawing, as building the conception of the work, one needs to be totally immerse into the process. The environment is always abstractive, either the annoying noise or the heart beat. So the beginning is very much like meditation of Zen, to get rid of the trifles and distracting thoughts, not just build up the conception of concrete work, also build up the proper state of mind. The materials are important. Every different type of pigment, paint, brush has its own characteristic. I chose these three basic tool for Chinese ink painting: ink, brush and rice paper , it is not just because we are from the same background, they can express myself better, also because the manufacturing operation of each of them. The origin of ink stick is the smoke from burning woods, and it experiences the multiple transformation of its modality -- it is first solidified to be powder then grinded in water to generate ink, when the ink drys on the paper, it becomes solid again. It is the life process of ink. Brush is just a tool to transmit the energy of the painter. Keep the arm always in a distance to the paper, thus we can train the control to brush and ourselves. Every breath would effect on the physical strength thus effects the usage of brush -- make it walk, ramble or run on the paper. Rice paper is just as the screen of a television, it reflects the image, control the resolution and the accuracy of the shape. Water is moving. What I try to present from these water drawing is also the sensation of moving. The four main drawings "water, well, miriness, wave" depict water in different environment.


How to draw a perfect circle This work is consisted by a video of the process of drawing circle and the physical drawings.It starts with the animated circles, then is the three screens showing the repeat of the movement of drawing. Beside the video, there is a transparent box half full with around 300 papers with the original drawn circles. This work is not about "how to draw a perfect circle", it is about the endless way to the imagined perfect. And the "perfect" is unreachable, it is the tool which drive us move towards. The real and concrete thing is the time we spend on the training, either on mental or physical aspect.


Works of other artists:

Barry Le Va - Shatter scatter As I see this work is very much like the process of drawing: the result is unpredictable, the artist(painter) only can control part of his work--the shape of scatter, the quantity and the size of the fragments, are all uncontrollable. And every layer which lays upon the older ones, has effected and been effected to the older ones. Drawing is similar in this way -- the painter can do his/her best to control the paint, the brush, the canvas by training, but he/she can never grasp the whole proceeding. Different layers of paint, ink or pigment is always influencing each other -- mix or conflict. There are always some emergent factors happen in the between, it can either be the increasing heart beating, the noise from the outside, or the unpredictable shaking triggered by a passing truck. ( Here "digital" drawing is beyond the scope of the discussion.) Barry Le Va called this work as "isolated isolated contained art", there is on pristine glass tops the others, this act is the relative mounting, to "encases the raw energy of the work's creation"(from the description of Barry Le Va - Shatter scatter by MOCA).

Gary Kuehn -- Gesture Project 2011 This work is simple and clear, it seems present a cool truth of drawing: the symbiotic limitation and freedom. The track generated by chalk is beautiful and the sound of the grating of the chalk and canvas do build a feeling of immersive. However the shape of drawing cannot jump out of the frame, somehow it can be seen as painter is creating his/her own three dimension world on the canvas( width, length, height), or in an other way, the canvas sets a boundary for the creation. He uses video to record the process, thus we can see the linear change happening on the canvas. By video, it does show the "time" as a factor in drawing, but somehow it loses the charm in every single moment of the proceeding ( of course Gary Kuehn may have other aim for this project ). The "charm" of the drawing process is subtle and quiet, even sometimes it seems wild and free like Jackson's gesture painting, but the real enjoyment in between is the moment ( not every moment ) when the painter can really feel the tension between himself/herself and the medium, the desire to express, and the isolation from outside world.