LESS IS MORE: In China, where Yin Ping Zheng was raised, a great artist can evoke an entire scene in a single brushstroke. After 34 years of studying Chinese painting and calligraphy, Zheng says he still has much to learn. Every Sunday, you’ll find him set up at the art walk on Cabrillo Boulevard, selling his paintings of birds and flowers, mountains and valleys. Zheng admits he makes some concessions for the American aesthetic, which tends to abhor a vacuum, yet his paintings retain the spaciousness and economy of his training. “When you leave the rice paper white, you allow the observer to fill it in with imagination,” he explained last week at his home studio, gesturing to the small painting he’d been working on that morning. On the white page, two black swallows darted between pale purple wisteria blossoms. “Show less,” he said, “and the viewer should feel more.”
Zheng specializes in the freehand style of traditional Chinese brush painting, which he studied for more than two decades under the tutelage of Master Wang Yao Ting. He now teaches the form and has exhibited his work internationally. Huddled over a cup of tea, Zheng was reticent to discuss his accomplishments. “I don’t like showing off,” he explained. “In Chinese culture, it’s about keeping calm and doing your best.”
Yet Zheng is driven, typically spending 10 hours a day painting, and he’ll talk at length about the formal qualities of his work. He uses a combination of water-based ink and paint to achieve intense black, vivid color, and the subtler hues in between. In one of his large-scale framed paintings, deep-pink peonies dominate the foreground, and two birds perch together on a plum branch farther off. Calligraphy in the corner confirms the symbolism of these images: The peonies represent wealth; plum blossoms, longevity; and the little birds, life-long partnership. Western viewers may not catch these symbols, Zheng acknowledged. But stop at his stall on Sunday, and he’ll fill you in. To learn more, visit yinpingzheng.com.
“Pink Fog Morning”, Kathleen Elsey


Print friendly
E-mail story
Tip Us Off
iPod friendly
Comments
Share Article
Myspace


Previous Month



Comments