035: Zeng Fanzhi’s Mask series No. 9

Posted September 19, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: Uncategorized

This short write-up was done last year, after a visit to Zeng Fanzhi’s solo art exhibition “Idealism” at SAM, at the request of my teacher.

In “Mask” series No. 9, 1996. Two men are sitting on a small sofa, a bulldog at their feet. All three are facing the viewer. The two men are dressed in matching outfits. They are also wearing red scarves, like those worn by the Young Pioneers of China, an organization that comes under the Communist Party of China. The red color of the scarves contrast greatly with the relatively dull color of the rest of the canvas.

Both men are wearing white masks that are characteristic of the series. The expression on the masks is indefinable. The eyes are overly large and bright, yet dead, owing to the four spots of highlights, revealing nothing about their inner emotions. (So much for the eyes being windows of the soul). In contrast, the men’s hands look disproportionately large. The figures’ exposed flesh looks raw, with pulsating veins clearly visible on the head and on the arms, revealing nervousness and turmoil of inner emotions. The man on the right is leaning back into his seat, one hand resting on the back of the sofa and the other posed below his face—a seemingly relaxed pose. The man on the left is leaning forward, with his elbows on his knees—another supposedly relaxed pose. The composition seems to be drawn for fashion magazines, as the orientation of figures largely resemble those that can be found in fashion photoshoots. However, the men’s outwardly relaxed pose is incongruent with their bodies. The folding of the body of the man on the right is cramped and uncomfortable, and in the other figure, the violent clenching of his hands gives a sense of the him being ill at ease. The contrast between the men’s expressions and their poses show their anxiety to appear impeccable. In addition, despite the two men sitting close to each other, there seem to be little interaction between them. They might as well be two individual shots from magazines cut and paste together.

Zeng Fanzhi might be making a commentary on the world today, where the image matters more than personality and individuality. In an increasingly affluent society, people are obsessed with the image that they present. They judge others based on their looks, and are in turn being judged by the same criteria. They may be uncomfortable with it (like the two gentlemen in the painting) but one man vs a whole crowd? So no matter who they are, how nervous they are feeling, they must don on that mask wherever they go. Even the dog is a sign of class: Owning pets in China was considered Capitalist, and even if the mindset has changed it is still expensive to own pets in China. The way the two men are sitting together without contact shows how the masks that they wore affected their communication. Because of the existence of masks, distance is created between them, making it hard to confide in anyone. They are so taken with presenting an ideal image of themselves that they have foregone that connectedness with a fellow human being. Beneath that mask, these men are getting lonelier.

And that’s something worth thinking about.

033: Toshiya

Posted September 18, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: 2-D works

Tags: ,

Toshiya, the bassist of Dir en grey. Painted for last year’s end-of-year grading. And no it is a he, not she.

032: Cubist painting

Posted September 18, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: 2-D works

Tried to do a cubist painting. It is hard, dammit! The painting is limited to two sets of complimentary colors. I’ve never tried that before, bu I don’t think it looks too bad.

I was resizing the scanned image in photoshop when I accidentally pressed command+i, and look what I got…

This is just the inverse of the original painting. But I think it looks more interesting in inverse than in the original.

031: Flower

Posted September 18, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: 2-D works

Done in watercolour around the same time as this piece. I admit that most of my time was spent on the petals, and so the center of the flower is not as good as it could have been.

Close up…

030: Batik Painting

Posted September 18, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: 2-D works

Batik.In case you don’t know, batik is done by applying melted wax on cloth, and then dipping it into dye (in this case I painted the colors on). A very messy business.

And some close-up shots:

029: MISC #2

Posted September 18, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: General trash

A bookmark design, supposed to be about the role of women in society. It is so obviously feminist.

Screenshot taken quite some time back, when my old computer was still functioning. I was playing around with my then newly purchased tablet, trying out things I could do with it. I know the girl’s eye looks a little weird. The angle is awkward to begin with. But oh well…

028: MISC #1

Posted September 17, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: General trash

DON’T laugh.

This was supposed to be a self-portrait. Until I realised that the person in the picture is so totally not me.

027: DESIGN #6 – Poster

Posted September 17, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: Designs

Was asked by a friend to do a poster for a basketball competition that he’s organising. (But sadly, that idea was not realised, as predicted by Jaye). I was given 4 days to do this, and it was during a period when there were lots of tests, quizzes and SIAs due. I did everything–like, everything–the night it was due. I worked until 12 am, until I was so annoyed by a certain someone that I refused to continue doing it anymore. (Trust me, if you were me you’d do the same).

Jaye helped me to find reference for the silhouettes. Images of the crowd taken from a stock-image website, and I took the photos of the HDB flats and the trees.

026: Toy Rabbit

Posted September 17, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: 2-D works, Course-work progress

Done as prep work for coursework way back in January. I darkened the colors in photoshop because in the original scanned image you could barely see the lines.

025: Broken Egg

Posted September 17, 2008 by nilyave
Categories: 2-D works, Course-work progress

Done in black pen on the night before grading. I don’t have much to say about this one. Cross-hatching takes a lot less time than paint and its finishing is a lot cleaner than pencil. The best medium if you want to do last minute work. :)