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Scholars
wail in despair as they and their books are thrown into a pit in Tu
Zhiwei's spectacular work "Heads, Books, Pit,'' currently on display at
Liu Haisu Art Museum.
Chicago-based
Tu Zhiwei has spent years creating his massive works depicting key
moments in Chinese history, such as construction of the Great Wall
(below).
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The
horror of book burning and the burial of ancient Confucian scholars is
depicted in a huge awe-inspiring canvas. It's part of a project by a
Chicago-based Chinese painter, writes Wang Jie.
In an epic
scene from hell, a vast fiery pit swallows piles of precious ancient
bamboo books. Scholars roar and wail in despair, helpless as China's
first emperor orders the burning of "dangerous ideas." Confucian
scholars are buried alive, a sacrifice to unity.
A colossal
canvas "Heads, Books, Pit" by Tu Zhiwei, depicts the high price of
stability in the Qin Dynasty (221-206 BC) after the tumult of the
Warring States Period (476-221 BC).
That third century BC
"cleansing" in all its horror is rendered on a canvas stretching eight
meters in length and two meters in width. It's like a mural of an
inferno.
Tu depicts the scene as though he had witnessed it
himself. The oil painting is one of six huge works on exhibit at the
Liu Haisu Art Museum, a major museum of contemporary art. The
exhibition runs until January 16.
Tu, who lives in Chicago, is
president of Oil Painters of America, a major association dedicated to
the preservation of representational art. He is its first Asian
president.
The canvas is part of his project to create 10 more
colossal canvases on 10 epic topics
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from China's history, in 10 years.
"Heads, Books, Pit" was created over 18 years.
"Sounds incredible?" asks Tu. "Even today when I look back, I can
hardly believe it myself."
Born
in 1951 in a poor village in Guangdong Province, Tu became passionately
interested in art when he was very young. He learned painting on his
own and was admitted to the oil painting department of Guangzhou
Academy of Fine Arts. In 1987 Tu entered Drake University in the US
state of Iowa.
"As early as 1980 I started to touch the subject
of Emperor Qin Shihuang's burning books and burying alive Confucian
scholars," says Tu. "The tragic event even today is quite
controversial, but it's not my responsibility to judge this. I just
want to try my best to mirror this historical event through my own
imagination."
During Emperor Qin's reign, he brutally eliminated intellectuals across
the land because he feared revolution.
Books, sources of ideas, were burned to ashes and often their writers
buried alive, including Confucian scholars.
Their
words were stifled, but Tu's canvas gives them voice. He lets viewers
"hear" the voices of struggle and anguish once again.
Reading
extensively and visiting the Qin terracotta warriors in Xi'an, China's
first capital in Shaanxi Province, Tu began his epic work with small
sketches. Then he enlarged it on canvas.
"It was very
difficult to control the composition," he says. "Painting a huge canvas
is such a tough job, as you never end up reworking it."
Tu has a way of painting a colossal piece sanely - "otherwise you could
sacrifice yourself on it."
"Don't paint too long in each session to keep some freshness, then put
it aside, don't even look at it for a while," he says.
Due
to its overwhelming size, Tu often had to run to his kitchen upstairs
to get a complete view of his canvas downstairs in his large studio.
Sometimes he had to shuttle between the kitchen and his studio for
nearly every key brush stroke. "That's why I have a sturdy body," he
jokes.
This is Tu's first Shanghai exhibition and it features other colossal
works, some turbulent in theme, some peaceful.
In
"Hands, Rafts, Yellow River," men struggle on a wooden raft caught in
the middle of the surging Yellow River, China's mother river. Every
tensing muscle of the desperate men is visible as they try to turn the
gigantic rudder.
"Feet, Troops and Horses, the Earth" recreates
Emperor Qin's heroic military forces, painted in fiery tones,
overcoming obstacles and holding off barbarian raiders from the north.
Another
canvas, "Dancers, Bells, Ancient Music," was inspired by the ancient
bells and woodwind instruments of 2,000-year-old musical tradition.
Unlike other canvases, this one radiates harmony and peace, joy and
prosperity in everyday life.
"In 10 years I plan to finish 10
large paintings of 10 major events in Chinese history," says Tu. "So
far I have only finished six."
Other canvases will depict the
construction of palaces and imperial mausoleums, Buddhist life in the
Tang Dynasty (618-907 AD) and the treasures of Dunhuang cave art.
"It might take me another 10 years," he says. "But I won't give up,
though the job becomes tougher and tougher."