Zhou Yan Contemporary Chinese Art Archive 周彦当代中国艺术档案
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Date
2018
Format
Article
Materials
Ink on silk
Dimensions
154×539cm
Description
The artist captured the twirling, surging, flux, unraveling, twisting, and explosion of natural objects. There are storms, waves, volcanoes, or rift valleys, reinforced by fluid, delicate ink brushwork and the rich layering of accumulated ink washes. As the title indicates, she was about to infer themyriad world by spyiny a spot. As Laozi noted, " the greatest has no shape," so some of the artworks are between the figurative and the non-figurative, which represent an ever-changing world in an endless process. All changes except for the change itself. (Source: Yan Zhou, "A History of Contemporary Chinese Art", 2020) (Angela Tan 28')
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A Thousand Mountains in One Particle of Dust 一尘千山 (compress).pdf (20580 kB)
