In Tongzhou District in the eastern suburbs of Beijing,
a white house stands quietly among countless residential
buildings. The courtyard is decorated with sculptures
of "Mother and Child," dragons and Buddhas
of different sizes. All of them are works of its owner
-- Han Meilin, 65, the prolific Chinese artist whose
works range from colossal urban sculptures -- including
the Five-Dragon Clock Tower in Atlanta in the United
States -- to graphic designs such as the red phoenix
logo for Air China, the major Chinese airlines.
This is the Han Meilin Art Studio.
Set up in 1989, it is the first art studio in China
named after an artist, and the only one of such kind
under the Chinese Artists Association.
The exhibition halls of the five-storied
Han Meilin Art Studio are filled with works of fine
art by Han and his assistants and students. The works
range from Chinese painting, calligraphy, sculpture,
pottery, wood carving to bronze weaponry, paper cutting
and cloth tigers. Over 3,000 of them have just come
back from the recent one-man Han Meilin exhibit held
from December 31, 2001 to January 13 at the China National
Museum of Fine Arts -- an exhibit that attracted more
than 50,000 visitors from the mainland and the United
States, Japan, India and Denmark as well as Hong Kong
and Taiwan.
"It was beyond all my expectations
to have so many attend the exhibit," said Han as
he talked recently with four reporters from china.org.cn.
After a tour of the studio itself, the reporters were
received by Han around an exquisitely wood-carved table
that Han designed himself in a meeting room behind his
studio.
Han said he attributes his success
to his firm understanding of his roots as a contemporary
artist in the Chinese folk art tradition.
"I'm confident of the road
I choose. I'm always following the way of folk arts,
and I will integrate that with contemporary concepts,"
he said.
According to Han's view -- science
and technology, democracy, legal system and religion
can all be globalized, but not art. Art must have its
unique identity, he said, which for a Chinese artist
includes roots in the Chinese nation.
In that regard, Han Meilin deplored
the works of those artists who turn their backs on their
roots, especially those who have just returned from
years of study in foreign countries to start issuing
orders right and left without any real analysis.
"This is like nothing but cutting
nerves of the Chinese people with scissors," Han
said, "I worry that Chinese folk art may die out
in our generation or that of our descendants."
To help prevent this, Han said he
will take the fight against influence that disregard
or demean Chinese folk art at the annual conference
of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference
(CPPCC), which will be held in March. Han is a member
of CPPCC because of his great achievements in art.
During the interview, Han Meilin
showed the reporters a photograph of the hall of the
former Central Academy of Arts and Design, from which
he graduated in 1960. The academy merged into Tsinghua
University in 1999. The hall, bright and new, is modern
with sculptures of western style, but with nothing of
Chinese.
"The day when the arts will
all be in accord with one another will be the doomsday
of art," Han said.
Any kind of art must have its "root,
" Han said. Art firmly rooted can prosper daily
while that with no root will pass, unable to stand the
test of time. With that root thoroughly in heart, Han
is able to express his will freely in many kinds of
artistic forms.
"Art is used to convey your
feelings to audiences. Which kind of art is used depends
on what you try to convey," Han said.
On one wall of his meeting room
is a calligraphy in which Han Meilin tells the story
of the Chinese fight against Japanese invasion. "I
showed it to Japanese visitors when they came, and they
could say nothing," Han said in the firm tones
of one who understands the gravity of battle to protect
one's nation.
For Han, merging modern ideas into
folk arts is the correct path. Most of his paintings
and sculptures both have inherited traditional Chinese
art features and have absorbed the quintessence of Western
art. In employing Chinese and foreign styles, Han focuses
on Chinese. Between ancient and modern, he selects modern.
In source and course of art, he stresses source.
Han Meilin also finds his roots
in the rich and colorful life of common people. For
more than 20 years, he has been leading trips to the
countryside. On his most recent tour last May, Han started
a mini-bus tour from Beijing accompanied by more than
20 young people. In the next seven months, they covered
over 30,000 km (about 18,641 miles). What emerges from
this contact is Han's versatile work that combines national
features with modern characteristics, integrating fine
art with design.
"We must keep in touch with
real life if we want to maintain a high cultural level,"
said Han, who has been known to donate schoolbags and
supplies to poor children in rural areas. In some places,
he has helped the local government set up Hope Project
schools. His assistance also has extended to local factories
engaging in art, and not just financially -- Han also
has designed for them, which always has helped sustain
their production.
Through his visits to these countryside
kilns, Han and his assistants helped salvage a lot of
traditional craftsmanship as they themselves came to
understand the most special features of folk art. In
the Han Meilin art studio visitors can see this in the
many bowls and bottles baked on the premises. Some seem
to be works-in-progress while some others are of high
artistic level.
In recent years, Han started his
sculpture series of "Mother and Child," several
of which stand in his courtyard. Each mother is slender
and elegant, and the child, chubby and naive. The contrast
incisively and vividly depicts the sincerest love on
the earth.
"It is just because I experienced
too many losses and sufferings that I cherish love today,"
Han Meilin said. Known to have suffered a hard childhood
and to have faced extreme difficulties during "cultural
revolution" (1966-76), the artist believes one
can benefit much from acting and thinking like a child.
In fact, Han said he always keeps a mind of a child
which helps feed the naivety, optimism, courage and
love in his works -- all part of his attitude toward
life.
For example, last year when Han
Meilin was working with porcelain in Yuzhou, an impoverished
town in Henan Province, he learned his wife was going
to make an unexpected visit. As a gift for her on the
occasion, Han Meilin stayed up all night doing small
paintings of animal in different forms. At the airport,
his wife received the 100th painting and a rose.
As early as in 1980, Han Meilin's
art was exhibited in shows in the United States in 21
cities, including New York and Boston. He was given
the key to the city of San Diego as an honorary citizen.
Manhattan in New York declared October 1, 1980 as the
"Han Meilin Day." During his stay in the United
States, he was also invited to give speeches at Harvard
and Yale universities.
In 1983, six of Han Meilin's works
were selected to be printed on Christmas cards issued
by the United Nations. Since 1989, he has held one-man
art show in over 20 countries. Today in the Century
Park of Atlanta on permanent display is his 10-meter-high
(10.9 yards) granite and cast copper sculpture-the Five-Dragon
Clock Tower designed by Han Meilin for the 26th Olympic
Games held in the city in 1996.
Han also has completed several colossal
urban sculptures for Dalian, Shenzhen, Jinan and some
other cities of China. The "Group Tigers"
he created for Dalian in northeast China's Liaoning
Province in 1989 have become a tour destination of the
city. The six granite sculptured tigers are 42 meters
(45.9 yards) in total length and 7 meters (7.7 yards)
in height. They weigh 4,800 tons. On one of them, over
100 children can stand up at the same time.
(China.org.cn by Li Jinhui February
7, 2002)
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