写生, 写生 = Live and alive

En plein air painting is translated slightly differently in the Chinese language. It is not ‘outdoor painting’ but ‘writing from life’. As I am not a theorist but a practitioner, I will not focus on the theory of calligraphic behavior in painting. The name I used here “Live and Alive”, is to depict...

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Main Author: Ng, Woon Lam
Other Authors: School of Art, Design and Media
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Ng Woon Lam 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137119
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1371192020-02-26T04:55:30Z 写生, 写生 = Live and alive Ng, Woon Lam School of Art, Design and Media Visual arts and music::Visual arts Paintings Plein Air Painting En plein air painting is translated slightly differently in the Chinese language. It is not ‘outdoor painting’ but ‘writing from life’. As I am not a theorist but a practitioner, I will not focus on the theory of calligraphic behavior in painting. The name I used here “Live and Alive”, is to depict the life force of en plein air painting process. ‘Live’ describes the passive observation but it sublimes itself into an active visual participation, making the subject matters ‘Alive’. As a painter, one moment I could be inspired to work while another moment, I could be just using painting as an excuse for expression. To me, the essence of en plein air process surpasses mere observation of the subject matters. It should reach a higher level where viewers are able to emotionally perceive a painter’s creative signal. Brushwork constitutes a major part of my painting. It requires an ability to summarize subject matters into their most essential forms. With that requirement, the difficulty of the painting process multiplies. The observation process and selective visual behavior will decide the success of a painting journey. To partially ease the problem, I work heavily in sketches and drawing study before moving into actual painting. To be ambitious of my results, I chose to work with large format pieces though it is against the common en plein air practice. I hope to present to my audience a new meaning of en plein air paintings. The dynamics of time and space involved in en plein air painting process increases the level of difficulty for painters but allows surprises. I wish my artworks and presentation of exhibition could bring my audience a new visual experience. I hope to bridge their visual behavior with the other four senses, and thereby enhance their emotional response to paintings. Published version 2020-02-26T04:55:29Z 2020-02-26T04:55:29Z 2011 Book Ng, W. L. (2011). 写生, 写生 = Live and alive (1st ed.). Singapore, Singapore: Ng Woon Lam. 9789810701604 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137119 en © 2011 The Author(s). All rights reserved. This book is made available with permission of The Author(s). application/pdf Ng Woon Lam
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Visual arts and music::Visual arts
Paintings
Plein Air Painting
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::Visual arts
Paintings
Plein Air Painting
Ng, Woon Lam
写生, 写生 = Live and alive
description En plein air painting is translated slightly differently in the Chinese language. It is not ‘outdoor painting’ but ‘writing from life’. As I am not a theorist but a practitioner, I will not focus on the theory of calligraphic behavior in painting. The name I used here “Live and Alive”, is to depict the life force of en plein air painting process. ‘Live’ describes the passive observation but it sublimes itself into an active visual participation, making the subject matters ‘Alive’. As a painter, one moment I could be inspired to work while another moment, I could be just using painting as an excuse for expression. To me, the essence of en plein air process surpasses mere observation of the subject matters. It should reach a higher level where viewers are able to emotionally perceive a painter’s creative signal. Brushwork constitutes a major part of my painting. It requires an ability to summarize subject matters into their most essential forms. With that requirement, the difficulty of the painting process multiplies. The observation process and selective visual behavior will decide the success of a painting journey. To partially ease the problem, I work heavily in sketches and drawing study before moving into actual painting. To be ambitious of my results, I chose to work with large format pieces though it is against the common en plein air practice. I hope to present to my audience a new meaning of en plein air paintings. The dynamics of time and space involved in en plein air painting process increases the level of difficulty for painters but allows surprises. I wish my artworks and presentation of exhibition could bring my audience a new visual experience. I hope to bridge their visual behavior with the other four senses, and thereby enhance their emotional response to paintings.
author2 School of Art, Design and Media
author_facet School of Art, Design and Media
Ng, Woon Lam
format Book
author Ng, Woon Lam
author_sort Ng, Woon Lam
title 写生, 写生 = Live and alive
title_short 写生, 写生 = Live and alive
title_full 写生, 写生 = Live and alive
title_fullStr 写生, 写生 = Live and alive
title_full_unstemmed 写生, 写生 = Live and alive
title_sort 写生, 写生 = live and alive
publisher Ng Woon Lam
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/137119
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