Home>News Center>Life
         
 

A farmer's realm of life
By Zhu Linyong (China Daily)
Updated: 2004-04-27 08:32

Outwardly, oil painter Qiao Wanying looks just like any other farmer.


"Flood Land Series: No 12" (Hetan Xiie), oil on canvas by Qiao Wangying, 76×100 cm [file photo]
He has a stocky but strong build and a sun burnt face. And he smiles heartily, unafraid of exposing his cigarette-stained teeth.

Nor does he ever speak of himself as "an artist." Rather, he often addresses himself as "anof enthusiast  oil painting."

But over the yeathem some prominent art professors, Qiao's impressive oil works have won him a number of fans, among rs and critics.

"The first time I saw his oil paintings, I was instantly struck by the somewhat clumsy and rough nature of his works, but also their striking beauty," said Beijing-based art critic Yin Shuangxi.


Qiao Wangying, 43, sits on a hill at his home in Xiyang County of North China's Shanxi Province. [file photo]
Yin is passionate when speaking of Qiao's paintings, which are done in bright colours with seemingly unpolished composition, forceful lines, dots, strokes, and chunks of pigment. "I could almost feel the thumping pulse of the artist who, driven by an unchained, burning passion, has worked hard to create these oil paintings," Yin said.

Now, the self-made artist has put on the first major solo exhibition of his oil paintings, entitled "A Farmer's Realm of Life," at the National Art Museum of China. It runs until tomorrow in Beijing.

On display are at least 50 selected paintings Qiao has created in recent years.

Born into a farmer's family in 1961 in the mountainous Xiyang County of North China's Shanxi Province, Qiao cherished a simple but deep love for art from an early age. But the impoverished family could not afford to pay for his further education in fine arts.

Nor could anyone give him any practical advice on how, where and what to learn, Qiao said.

Qiao began to work in a local hardware store after his graduation in 1978 from Xiyang High School.

"Like my brothers and sisters, I am the child of farmers," Qiao said. "But I am a young farmer with a paintbrush. Painting is purely a need of my soul."

Qiao now makes a living by running a small interior decoration company in Xiyang.

A devoted Buddhist and Taoist believer, Qiao also works in a local home for the senior citizens in Juren Village where he lives in an undecorated, simply equipped house with his elderly parents.

Still burning with the love for art, between 1986 and 1988, he "fled," as he described it, from his small village and came to Beijing. He used all his savings to attend short-term training courses in the Central Academy of Fine Arts and the Art Academy of the People's Liberation Army.

"Painting is my only luxury. In the process of painting, I feel a strong sense of tranquility and an enduring inner joy," claimed Qiao.

Qiao often leaves behind the burden of running his company to his younger brother and "disappears" for days, even weeks, going out on a truck, to make sketches and paintings in the mountains.

Before taking up the paintbrush, Qiao said, he often practises meditation in the wilderness, allowing himself to fall into a trance-like state of mind.

"I begin painting only when I got the right mood and cannot stop myself from painting," Qiao said. "After a piece of work is done, I feel like I am just awaking from a deep-set dream. I cannot describe in words how much joy I feel."

But sometimes he may have sat for hours in the sunshine or in the breeze, only to find that he does not get any inspiration and has to give it up, Qiao admitted.

Qiao said he has never forced himself to paint even though he is "always moved by the beauty of the landscapes, of the villages, fields, and fellow countrymen."

"As far as I know, Qiao has travelled very little. All that Qiao paints are just commonly seen scenes in his hometown. All his inspiration comes from the land he is so familiar with," said critic Jia Fangzhou, a friend of Qiao's.

"Some art critics may find in Qiao's paintings the traces of Western Impressionism and even hints of Vincent Van Gogh's works. But Qiao's art is by no means an imitation, it just grows out of his life and out of his heart."

Last April, several of Qiao's oil paintings were first published by China Oil Painting, a monthly academic art journal.

Some of his paintings have also been collected by the Museum of the Central Academy of Fine Arts.

"I was greatly encouraged by these results," Qiao recalled.

"I was not overjoyed, but was humbled by the art of painting. What I can do now is to keep going ahead."

 
  Today's Top News     Top Life News
 

NPC decision favours gradual electoral changes in HK

 

   
 

Institute isolated for suspected lab infection

 

   
 

Zeng: Hegemony never on nation's agenda

 

   
 

Testimony: Japanese war chemicals did harm

 

   
 

300 infected with measles in Sichuan

 

   
 

Beijing coppers to fly choppers in 2008

 

   
  The theater mutation project
   
  Louvre: Mona Lisa deteriorating quickly
   
  Youth-asset or liability?
   
  Writer focuses on education
   
  A farmer's realm of life
   
  When Einstein was left as sick as a parrot
   
 
  Go to Another Section  
 
 
  Story Tools  
   
  Feature  
  Sylvia Chang: from Actress to Director  
Advertisement
         
主站蜘蛛池模板: 天天在线天天看成人免费视频| 国产色在线|亚洲| 日韩精品内射视频免费观看 | 一本大道在线无码一区| 最近免费中文字幕大全免费版视频| 免费大片在线观看网站| 韩国免费高清一级毛片性色 | 亚洲乱码无码永久不卡在线| 黑巨人与欧美精品一区| 女m羞辱调教视频网站| 久久免费看黄a级毛片| 欧美日韩不卡合集视频| 八戒八戒在线观看免费视频| 黄色a级片在线观看| 国产精品爽黄69天堂a| tubesex69| 无码欧精品亚洲日韩一区| 亚洲伊人精品综合在合线| 男人插女人app| 国产一区在线看| 亚洲精品一二区| 国产鲁鲁视频在线观看| yy111111影院理论大片| 欧美在线视频一区| 免费一级毛片在线播放视频| 艾粟粟小青年宾馆3p上下| 国产极品麻豆91在线| 97久久天天综合色天天综合色hd| 少妇真实被内射视频三四区| 久久久久久综合| 日韩色日韩视频亚洲网站| 亚洲天堂中文字幕| 爱情论坛免费在线看| 午夜剧场免费体验| 蹂躏国际女刑警之屈服| 国产我和子的与子乱视频 | 免费人成视频x8x8入口| 色yeye香蕉凹凸视频在线观看| 国产婷婷一区二区三区| 720lu国产刺激在线观看| 天堂网在线.www天堂在线资源|