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․報導-Taiwan
News
Famous painter Jhychen Wu
holding solo show in Taiwan
The artist wants to help
people learn more about Taiwanese life
Taiwan News, Staff Writer
Page 3
2008-04-11
Well-known Taiwanese painter
Jhychen Wu (巫日文),
who has been studying, working and residing
in France for more than 10 years, recently
returned to Taiwan to hold a solo exhibition
entitled "The Face Code," featuring abstract
portraits of those who have dedicated
themselves to serving this land and its
people.
Wu has been studying painting
under the guidance of well-known painter Lee
Shih-chiao (李石樵)
since he was 16 years old. Wu was later
encouraged by his teacher to go to France to
pursue advanced studies there. He was
admitted to Lyon College of Arts as an art
student and had to work many part-time jobs
to support his studies there.
Wu has greatly expanded his
vision as a painter and artist while in
France. His works have begun to receive
attention because of his constant pursuit of
breakthroughs in his creative works. Since
1997 Wu has dedicated himself to creating
works featuring people who have dedicated
themselves to Taiwan and its people.
He returned to his hometown
in Nantou County in central Taiwan for a
three-month field study in order to learn
more about the people in his works. Each of
his paintings is like a field study report.
Wu wishes to help people
around the world to learn more about people
from all walks of life in Taiwan's society
who have dedicated themselves to the
creation of a common experience about living
in Taiwan.
So far Wu has chosen dozens
of people as subjects of his works on
display at the exhibition. Among them are
the Buddhist Master Cheng Yen (證嚴法師),
Puppet Master Lee Tien-lu (李天祿),
Singer Teresa Teng (鄧麗君),
Nobel Chemistry Prize winner Lee Yuan-tseh (李遠哲),
and the late twin daughters of former
Democratic Progressive Party chairman Lin I-hsiung
(林義雄).
Also included are foreign
missionaries such as Joyce McMillan (瑪喜樂阿嬤)
and Lillian Dickson (孫理蓮),
who dedicated themselves to taking care of
people suffering from all kinds of chronic
diseases since they came here several
decades ago.
"Doesn't this painting look
like someone?" is a frequent comment from
spectators. Wu is different from other
painters in that he constantly seeks an
astonished reaction from spectators from
their inner hearts after viewing the
destruction in his original paintings.
This amazement generated by
the viewers is exactly what the artist
anticipates. The way he brushes his paint on
over and over again is like encoding his
artworks, and the conversations within the
spectators are like the process of decoding.
He has deliberately adapted a
fast brush technique in his painting and
uses low chroma colors to demonstrate a
blurred face. In addition, he adds
horizontal and vertical strokes in his
paintings in order to use the paintings to
construct image codes.
For Wu, the faces in his
paintings represent a kind of symbol and
code within which unselfish spirits are
hidden. These codes can be deciphered only
when you try to understand the profound and
long-concealed meanings of ideas. This way
of approaching his painting is like a
process of encoding so that existing
messages (the faces of characters in the
painting) are hidden, and original meanings
are turned into a new genre (twisted and
deformed faces).
Wu's paintings challenge the
images that are taken for granted by common
society. He tries to express what he
comprehends from these characters.
These kinds of codes
establish concealed images, and each drawing
is similar to the process of encoding,
transmitting and decoding. This allows
people's thoughts to move back and forth
between reality and unreality. The resulting
philosophical articulation easily inspires
reactions from the audience, and the blurred
images remind us of the soul of our life.
Wu's exhibition at Gallery
41(斯依畫廊)
at No. 41, Lane 100 Dun Hua South Road Sec.
1, Taipei, will run through April 27. Those
interested in the exhibition may call (02)
8773-5089 for more information.
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