WALASSE TING (1929 - 2010)

Transcription

WALASSE TING (1929 - 2010)
WALASSE TING (1929 - 2010)
Front Cover: Rooster 82 x 127 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
WALASSE TING
8th – 23rd February 2016
CATTO GALLERY
100 Heath Street • Hampstead • London NW3 1DP
Tel: +44 (0)20 7435 6660 • art@cattogallery.co.uk
3
Six years after his death, Walasse Ting is emerging as one of the most interesting and important painters of the 20th century. He represents a fascinating historical
story. Here’s an artist who was present at the centre of the 20th century world art scene - first in Paris, then New York. Simultanously, he was an outsider.
Ting was born in Wuxi, China in 1929 but raised in Shanghai. Though he underwent some early formal training at the Shanghai Art Academy, he was largely selftaught and would even paint on the pavements of his home town. During the 1940s, Ting’s reputation grew. He persuaded a bookshop owner in Hong Kong to
display some of his watercolours, and this brought him to the attention of business magnate John Keswick, who bought a number of paintings for $100 each.
Though his star seemed to be rising, Ting decided to leave China for Paris - the heart of the international art scene. He arrived with barely any money and
very few connections. But slowly he formed close connections with the CoBrA Group - a school of artists based in Copenhagen (Co), Brussels (Br), Amsterdam
(A). CoBrA preached pure experimentation in colour, and Ting clearly embraced the philosophy. He also formed a lifelong friendship with Belgian artist, Pierre
Alechinsky, who discovered Ting sleeping on bare boards in a tiny attic room.
By 1958, Ting decided to re-locate again to what was by then the world centre of experimental art: New York. This was where his style - and his following took flight. Ting threw himself into abstraction, and began to absorb the influence of the firebrand innovators of the period - Claes Oldenburg, Jim Dine, Asger
Jorn, Robert Rauschenberg and others.
He also began to write poetry, penning short enigmatic pieces in English. In 1964, a book of his poems was published with a folio of over 60 prints by 28 major
artists: Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Sam Francis, James Rosenquist and more. Essentially every major artist on the New York scene was a participant. Their
involvement reflected Ting’s vaulted reputation and his unique place at a spot between pop and abstraction, and between the US, Europe and China.
Though he was close to the American avant garde,Ting also formed close friendships with New York-based Chinese artists such as the photorealist Hilo Chen
and the painter Dennis Huang. These diverse influences led Ting to paint abstract work in unique luminous colours. Simply, no one else seemed capable of
producing work that looked anything like this.
By the 1970s, Ting had arrived at his mature painting style. The extraordinary colour was still there, but he began to apply it to erotic nude subjects and later
to studies of flowers, birds and animals. There’s no doubt that the artist’s immersion in Western experimental ideas affected his output. Indeed, his Western
name - Walasse - was inspired by the spelling of Matisse.
But his Chinese roots were always evident.Ting’s flattened perspectives recall scroll paintings, as do the recurring floral motifs. Still later, the Eastern inspirations
became more explicit. In the 1980s, Ting began using rice paper to produce a series of fabulous and delicate bird and flower paintings.
Many of these works were made in Amsterdam, which reminded Ting of Hangzhou and its canals. He loved it there, and moved to the Netherlands in 1987.
Sadly, he suffered a brain hemorrhage in 2002, and died in 2010.
Today, with China at the forefront of the global economy, a new audience is coming to understand this unique artist, one who straddled Western and Eastern
art but stands alone thanks to his singular talent.
4
RED HORSE ON PINK
82 x 125 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
5
I LOVE CHRYSANTHEMUMS
69 x 94 cm, Acrylic on canvas
6
7
GIRL IN BLUE DRESS
22 x 29 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
8
GREEN AND YELLOW PARROTS
80 x 115 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
9
YOUNG GIRL WITH BOUQUET OF FLOWERS
80 x 107 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
10
11
BLUE VASE, MANY FLOWERS
61 x 97 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
12
13
PURPLE CAT, PINK BACKGROUND
48 x 65 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
14
15
ORANGE CAT
47 x 58 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
16
ORANGE & YELLOW SUNFLOWERS
79 x 109 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
17
18
19
BOUQUETS & FRUITS
96 x 180 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
20
LADY WITH YELLOW HAT
51 x 69 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
21
WHITE BUTTERFLIES SLEEP ON VIOLET BED
79 x 103 cm, Acrylic on canvas
22
Works Acquired by:
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Museum of Modern Art, New York
Guggenheim Museum, New York
Tate Modern, London
Pompidou Centre, Paris
Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam
Chicago Arts Institute, Chicago
Museum of Fine Art, Boston
Detroit Institute of Art, Detroit
Museum of Art, Hong Kong
Israel National Museum, Jerusalem
M.C.A., Los Angeles
Silkeborg Kunstmuseum, Denmark
Randers Museum, Denmark
National Gallery of Art, Reykjavik
Rockefeller University, New York
Baltimore Museum, Baltimore
Philadelphia Museum, Philadelphia,
Musee Cernuschi, Paris
Carnegie Institute, Pittsburg
Chrysler Museum, Provincetown
Santa Barbara Museum, Santa Barbara
Chrysler Museum at Norfolk, Virginia
Pasadena Art Museum, Pasadena
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo
Hopkins Centre Art Galleries, New Hampshire
Back Cover: Flowers & Two Grasshoppers 36 x 47 cm, Acrylic on rice paper
CATTO GALLERY
100 Heath Street • Hampstead • London NW3 1DP
Tel: +44 (0)20 7435 6660 • www.cattogallery.co.uk • art@cattogallery.co.uk
Opening times: 10am - 6pm Mon - Sat • 12.30pm - 6pm Sunday • and by appointment
EXHIBITION DATES: 8th – 23rd February 2016