
Bruce Maclaren
Global Head, Chinese Paintings and Calligraphy
This auction has ended. View lot details
Sold for US$47,812.50 inc. premium
Our Chinese Ceramics & Works of Art specialists can help you find a similar item at an auction or via a private sale.
Find your local specialist
Global Head, Chinese Paintings and Calligraphy
林風眠 嘉陵江上 設色紙本 立軸
Provenance/來源:
Far East Fine Arts, San Francisco, California, 1998
加州舊金山遠東藝術中心,1998年
Published/出版:
Little, Stephen, and J. May Lee Barrett. New Songs on Ancient Tunes: 19th-20th Century Chinese Paintings and Calligraphy from the Richard Fabian Collection, Honolulu: Honolulu Academy of Arts, 2007, pp. 526-527
Little, Stephen, J. May Lee Barrett,《古調新歌:費立哲神父珍藏十九及二十世紀中國書畫》,檀香山藝術博物館,夏威夷,2007年,頁526-527
Exhibited/展覽:
New Songs on Ancient Tunes, Honolulu Art Academy, Honolulu, Hawaii, August 30-October 28, 2007
《古調新歌:費立哲神父珍藏十九及二十世紀中國書畫》,檀香山藝術博物館,夏威夷,2007年8月30日至10月28日
Lin Fengmian's six years at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris made an indelible mark on his painting in the decades that followed. Although the artist mainly abandoned Western oil painting after he returned to China in 1926, preferring traditional Chinese brushes and paper. However, he continued to seek a synthesis of Chinese and Western aesthetics throughout his prolific career. This river landscape is a case in point. The scene depicted is likely the Jialing River, located in Chongqing, where the artist spent the wartime 1940's.
Dispensing with either the tall horizontal or long vertical of the traditional Chinese hanging scroll or handscroll, Lin Fengmian takes a near square format to compose the scene, a nod to the Western canvas. Within the square, the artist uses a range of brushstrokes to fill the surface with muted tones. The palette, shape, and horror vacui are strongly reminiscent of a Western oil painting. Yet Lin Fengmian's strong calligraphic brushwork, endowed with rhythmic vitality, returns the painting to China, and demonstrates the artists ability to synthesize two distinct traditions.