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Art News in
Asia>>Tu Zhiwei Reviewed by China's
CCTV
On June 27, 2007, Robert Ireland of China's leading
national TV news and culture channel reviewed Zhiwei Tu's
works on display at the National Art Museum of China in Beijing. The
story first appeared in the West on
href="http://tuart.blogspot.com/2007/06/china-tv-covers-tu-exhibition.html"
target="_blank">the
Zhiwei Tu Art Blog. It is reproduced here (in video and text
transcript) with permission:
href="http://tuart.blogspot.com/2007/06/china-tv-covers-tu-exhibition.html"
target="_blank">China
TV Covers Tu Exhibition
China's
CCTV, the largest national television network in all of China, on June
27 this past week broadcast
href="http://www.cctv.com/video/cultureexpress/2007/06/cultureexpress_128_627_4.shtml"
target="_blank">a
three-minute, fifteen-second review
of Tu Zhiwei's exhibition of paintings at the National Museum of Fine
Arts in Beijing. It is a superb television report, narrated (in
English) by Robert Ireland. A copy, above, is now available on YouTube.
A transcript (also in English) is available
href="http://www.cctv.com/program/cultureexpress/627/2.shtml"
target="_blank">here
and is summarized below.
For
Western viewers who want to see the origiinal CCTV broadcast, the video
is best seen using a fast connection and an
up-to-date Internet Explorer browser with the latest Java plug-in.
(CCTV tends to use the very latest in production and internet
technology.) U.S. cable TV and satellite viewers may be able to catch a
replay if their home TV provider includes the English-language "Culture
Express" channel in the program lineup. (See, for example,
href="http://www.directv.com/DTVAPP/epg/theGuide.jsp?tz=e&l=&dma=&z=&c=&ct=&sml=1&sp=n&sd=a&d=181&h=13"
target="_blank">Direct
TV's channel 455.)
Reviewer Ireland
first takes a look at some of the paintings from Tu's "bones" period.
"The divided world of Tu Zhiwei," he perceptively calls it. It is a
world, he reports, "that exists on many levels, divided vertically and
horizontally, and even touching new dimensions."
Presumably
the painter resides here somewhere. But just where, may be hard to
cite, as he seems to set his spirit free from the confines of the body,
entering a realm a little beyond immediate experience, a little removed
from the known time-space continuum.
Tu's "bone"
paintings were conceived in his earliest years in the U.S. when he was
working alongside the late, revered American painter,
Jules
Kirschenbaum.
It was an exciting but scary time in the life of the artist. He found
himself thrust into a completely foreign culture, far removed from
family and friends, struggling with an alien language and adjusting to
American ways that can seem exceedingly strange to an outsider. Yet, he
was also suddenly free to dedicate every waking moment to his art.
"Many dimensions," indeed.
Turning
to later works such as a number of nude portraits and Tibetan paintings
included in the exhibition, the reviewer acutely observes that "viewers
find it hard to connect" these works with the same artist who conceived
the "bones" paintings.
Like
his paintings, Tu the man, has many facets and styles. Visitors find it
hard to connect the nude paintings hung on the opposite wall, to the
creator of such startling imagery [as the "bones" paintings]. The
thick, short strokes and hazy lines recall Impressionism. More
precisely, it's an expression of the American variant, in which the
figure retains more of its original form.
As for his latest work, "it's in these --
href="http://www.tuartgallery.com/large1.html" target="_blank">his
history-themed
giant canvasses -- that the painter's artistic genius comes into
full force."
The compositional
rigor, paired with splendid color sense, evoke such Western masters as
Titian and Van Eyck.
* * *
These
grandiose scenes, depicting events of great moment, probably would find
their place as chapel pieces if such religious constructs were found in
Chinese history. But the expressions of faces, ranging from panic and
horror to outrage and despair, belie the artist's obsession with the
darker side of history.
Indeed, if there's any altar for these works to be lain, it may be said
they rest on the altar of the human spirit.
After
what has to be described as a triumphant artist's tour of major Chinese
museums, Tu returns to the United States this coming month. No doubt
energized and inspired, he'll be resuming both his remarkable artistic
work and his role as
href="http://www.tuartgallery.com/TU-NEWS/news_West0704.html"
target="_blank">'informal
ambassador' building bridges across the Pacific for artists on
both sides of the Pacific.