Take a look at the photo of the lidded pot. How long do you think it took to paint?
Yingge (鶯歌) artist Chang Sung-shan’s (張松山) brush dances over the lid as he talks of his life, his art, his plans. I assume he’s just distractedly doodling during our interview.
As we conclude, I walk over and look at what he’s been doing. He has painted a fully-formed, complex, multilayered, monochromatic floral composition in the muted gray of the unfired cobalt underglaze pigment. It took him less than 30 minutes.
Photo: Paul Cooper, Taipei Times
Six years ago, Chang returned to painting following a career serving in the armed forces. He has chosen to paint on ceramics. His challenges now are two historically entrenched mindsets biased against his art — the dominance of the Western-Chinese hybrid style introduced during the early Qing dynasty and the idea that painting on ceramics can only be considered a handicraft, not an art form — as well as an anemic market for his work in Taiwan.
Chang’s style predates Qing dynasty court painting techniques. The Italian Jesuit priest Giuseppe Castiglione (郎世寧), who served under the early Qing emperors Kangxi (康熙), Yongzheng (雍正) and Qianlong (乾隆), introduced Western painting ideas such as vanishing perspective, meticulous, detailed brushwork and a tendency to fill the entire canvas. Castiglione’s hybrid style has heavily influenced Chinese painting since.
Chang still follows the traditional academic school (學院派), which he says has its roots in antiquity. This school concentrates on painting in the traditional xieyihua (寫意畫, describing ideas) style and moyun (墨韻, the poetic flow of the ink), eschewing gaudy colors and favoring the use of negative space to convey ideas.
Photo: Paul Cooper, Taipei Times
“You don’t need to fill everything with paint: you give people space in which to use their own imagination,” Chang quips.
Chang says that traditional Chinese ink painting is quickly disappearing. Teachers nowadays teach the hybrid Western-Chinese style, and many artists have trained in Western painting.
The painter set up shop in Yingge District six years ago, thinking to combine the expertise of this pottery-making area and the painting skills he mastered before he joined the military.
Few others in Yingge paint underglaze blue directly on ceramics, so there’s little competition in that regard. Transitioning from painting on paper to painting on the surface of unfired ceramics came quickly to Chang. The problem has been overcoming the idea that painting on ceramics cannot be considered an art form.
Ming and Qing underglaze blue vases were generally decorated by craftsmen, not painters. Chang has a lot of respect for the tradition of painting in underglaze blues — “it’s the only thing that can really convey the ancient tradition” — and favors this technique over polychromatic overglaze colors.
Chang points to oil painting in Western churches and cathedrals, on ceilings and walls, to illustrate that painting doesn’t necessarily have to be done on paper for it to be considered art. He believes that art is about expression. The medium it is painted on is beside the point.
“A work of art is a unique object that the maker has put their all into conveying their ideas, has tried their utmost to make as beautiful as they can,” he says.
While the ceramic medium presents its own inherent problems as a canvas, there is also much to recommend it. So many factors must come together to create a perfect piece: the skill of the potter, the quality of the porcelain, the technique of the painter, and flawless application of the transparent overglaze, together with a bit of luck in the firing process.
“You have no idea if the firing will go well, whether it will be successful or not, or whether there will be any natural phenomena, such as impurities or contaminants,” Chang says.
If all goes well, however, the result is an object of beauty and practical use that could last for thousands of years. At the moment, Chang is trying to establish a name for himself in China.
“There is no market in Taiwan,” he says. In China, however, there is money, and people there are more prepared to spend money on his art.
Last July he exhibited in Beijing, and found a group of collectors interested in his brand of painting.
“They haven’t seen an artist, able to paint in the style of the ancients that they miss, appearing on the scene for a long time,” he adds.
— Additional reporting by Louis Jia-yu Wei
Yingge Town Artisan is a monthly photographic and historical exploration of the artists and potters linked to New Taipei City’s Yingge Town.
A few weeks ago I found myself at a Family Mart talking with the morning shift worker there, who has become my coffee guy. Both of us were in a funk over the “unseasonable” warm weather, a state of mind known as “solastalgia” — distress produced by environmental change. In fact, the weather was not that out of the ordinary in boiling Central Taiwan, and likely cooler than the temperatures we will experience in the near-future. According to the Taiwan Adaptation Platform, between 1957 and 2006, summer lengthened by 27.8 days, while winter shrunk by 29.7 days. Winter is not
Taiwan’s post-World War II architecture, “practical, cheap and temporary,” not to mention “rather forgettable.” This was a characterization recently given by Taiwan-based historian John Ross on his Formosa Files podcast. Yet the 1960s and 1970s were, in fact, the period of Taiwan’s foundational building boom, which, to a great extent, defined the look of Taiwan’s cities, determining the way denizens live today. During this period, functionalist concrete blocks and Chinese nostalgia gave way to new interpretations of modernism, large planned communities and high-rise skyscrapers. It is currently the subject of a new exhibition at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum, Modern
March 25 to March 31 A 56-year-old Wu Li Yu-ke (吳李玉哥) was straightening out her artist son’s piles of drawings when she inadvertently flipped one over, revealing the blank backside of the paper. Absent-mindedly, she picked up a pencil and recalled how she used to sketch embroidery designs for her clothing business. Without clients and budget or labor constraints to worry about, Wu Li drew freely whatever image came to her mind. With much more free time now that her son had found a job, she found herself missing her home village in China, where she
In recent years, Slovakia has been seen as a highly democratic and Western-oriented Central European country. This image was reinforced by the election of the country’s first female president in 2019, efforts to provide extensive assistance to Ukraine and the strengthening of relations with Taiwan, all of which strengthened Slovakia’s position within the European Union. However, the latest developments in the country suggest that the situation is changing rapidly. As such, the presidential elections to be held on March 23 will be an indicator of whether Slovakia remains in the Western sphere of influence or moves eastward, notably towards Russia and