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Published on Taipei Times http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/feat/archives/2007/02/08/2003348228 A century on Li Shih-chiao's work hangs in the Presidential Office, and is usually seen only by dignitaries. Now the hoi polloi has a chance to view his paintings at a TFAM retrospective
By Noah Buchan
The curators at TFAM arranged the exhibit to chart Li's development as an artist, bringing together paintings that span his long career and provide a context to show the influence he had on later generations of artists. "You have to be determined, and willing to bear hardship," Li once remarked. "My whole life, I've seriously pursued one thing: how to paint my paintings well." The exhibit, which reveals Li's interest in Western and Eastern artistic styles, is arranged chronologically in three sections titled refinement, metamorphosis and light. Early in his career, Li studied under the Japanese masters Ishikawa Kinichiro and Yoshimura Yoshimatsu, painting the people and scenery of Taiwan with sparse brush strokes and solid, brilliant colors.
The painting Still Life, exemplifies Li's mastery of line and form, with firm brushwork and radiant colors.
Li's adoption of these artistic styles fueled his creation of a novel series of paintings. Still Life Flowers, painted in 1961, is rich in symbolism and far removed from earlier works, which emphasized realism. The third and final period of Li's output, from the early 1970s until he put the brush down twenty years later, is marked by a preoccupation with light, exemplified by his Three Graces. It is also during this period that Li threw in his lot with a younger generation of painters who, due to the growing affluence of Taiwanese society and the consequent access to other parts of the world, focused on using art to represent the expression of ideas.
As part of the exhibition, TFAM is including related manuscripts and documents from each period to provide a context to Li's works.
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