Lim Lucy, Six contemporary Chinese women artists : Irene Chou, Nie Ou, Nie Ou, Nancy Chu Woo, Yang Yanping, Zhao Xihuan, Zhou Sicong, exh. cat., Cinese Culture Center, San Francisco [Decembre 21, 1991 – March 21, 1992], San Francisco, Cinese Culture Center, 1991.
Expressive Ink: Painting By Yang Yanping and Zeng Shanqing, Art Institute Chicago, August 10 – November 10, 2019
→Yang Yanping – Ink Bloom, Michael Goedhuis, Lonson, November 1 – December 6, 2012
→Yang Yanping, Peter Findlay Gallery, New York, November 11 – December 15, 2008
Chinese visual artist.
Based in New York, Yang Yanping (杨燕屏) is one of the leading modernist ink and oil painter from China. She trained in architectural design at Tsinghua University, Beijing and after graduating in 1958, she taught design for a short time before entering the Beijing Academy of Fine Arts in 1966. She also studied Chinese traditional painting of her own volition.
The 1980s were a turning point for Yang and many other artists in China, who began to practice their craft more freely as the country’s stricter policies imposed under Mao’s Cultural Revolution began to lessen. Yang started to create historical paintings for the Museum of Chinese History and the Museum of Chinese Revolution in Beijing. Her work also saw a shift in style from realism and her earlier monochromatic palette towards a more expressive, personal composition, with a colourful and abstract style of painting. She began to exhibit more widely and became a member of OPRA (Oil Painting Research Association), which included many leading mid-generation oil painters, some of whom had attended the Beijing Academy.
Her work Towering Mountain (c. 1981) was shown the exhibition, Chinese Contemporary Painting: An Exhibition from the PRC, for the Chinese Cultural Centre in San Francisco (1984), which toured the United States. She was recommended for the show by the Asian art expert, James Cahill who had first seen her work in Beijing in 1982.
Wang subsequently traveled to the United States in 1986 with her husband, the painter Zeng Shanqing (b. 1932). The opportunity arose as both were awarded visiting artist fellowships by Stony Brook University in New York.
That same year the couple met the American art historian Joan Lebold Cohen, a seminal figure in the field of documenting modern art from China since the early 1960s, having visited the country a number of times over more than a decade. By this time Yang had moved to the United States permanently, living in Long Island and in New York. J. L. Cohen publish her comprehensive book of interviews with and photographs of Chinese artists, The New Chinese Painting 1949-1986 in 1987. The publication spanned three generations of pioneering ink and watercolour painters, and also featured a profile on Yang, whom J. L. Cohen described as, “An accomplished rising star at the Beijing Print Academy”.
Whilst Yang’s early works has always had an affinity with classical Chinese painting, most notably its landscape genre, she is best known through her early embrace of calligraphy and subsequently her multiple renderings of the eternal yet fragile strength of lotus flower. Yang’s modernist reinterpretation of guohua could also be recognised in her unique approach to depicting mists, clouds and fields. However, it is the lotus, which in its semi-abstract form and gloriously vibrant colourfield hues reveals Yang’s intense feelings towards her subject matter. Other paintings attest to her continued interest in exploring flora and fauna, and specifically the changing seasons; with works such as Brilliant Autumn (1993) and Scent of Summer Night (2000) where the flowers appear to metamorphose from naturalistic pods into bursts of colorful shapes and forms on the surface of the paper.
Over the ensuing decades Yang has continued to experiment with the multifarious ways materials can be adapted to create new pictorial expressions. Rather than the continued use of traditional brush techniques for applying ink to paper, for example, she is known for her “brushless technique”, an ingenious use of crumbled paper as an alternative material for applying paint. The paper is soaked or pressed like a sponge into a mixture of contrasting washes of watercolour, inks and diluted acrylics then dabbed on to both sides of painted paper.
Although a celebrated artist in China in the early 1980s, with her work shown internationally, it appears Yang has still to receive such recognition in the United States. The Art Institute of Chicago where Yang’s most recent joint exhibition in 2019 took place, titled, Expressive Ink: Painting By Yang Yanping and Zeng Shanqing (2019), marked the first presentation of both these artists’ works in a major art museum in the United States in over three decades.
Now in her eighties, Yang continues to explore a wide range of hybrid lotus forms and landscape subjects, in ways that continue to reflect what matters most – her embrace of artistic autonomy – and being free to make the art that she wants.