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천안문 공식 마오초상화가 88세로 사망!

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Wang Guodong, official painter of the Mao Zedong portraits, dies at 88 
danilfineman  August 29, 2019   No Comments
BEIJING — His portraits had been among the many most recognizable on the planet, rivalling the Mona Lisa.

However few have heard of Wang Guodong, the Chinese language artist who for years was liable for portray the big portrait of Mao Zedong — changed yearly — that gazes down on Tiananmen Sq. in Beijing.
 
 
Wang, who was 88 when he died Friday at a hospital in Beijing, was chosen in 1964, when he was in his early 30s, to be the official painter of the 15-by-20-foot oil portrait of Mao that hangs steps from the occasion’s central seat of energy, on the Gate of Heavenly Peace. Portraits of Mao have been put in there since 1949, when the Communists took energy in China; they’re regularly changed as a result of they’re uncovered to the weather. (A portrait of Chiang Kai-shek, the Nationalist chief who misplaced the civil conflict to Mao’s Communists, had hung there beforehand.)

 
The job was one of many highest — and most intimidating — honours out there to a painter in China. In an indication of Wang’s stature in Communist Social gathering circles, a funeral was held for him Sunday at Babaoshan, the cemetery in Beijing reserved for occasion elite, Beijing Youth Day by day reported. Mao Xinyu, Mao’s grandson, was stated to have despatched a wreath.

Through the years, Mao’s look advanced as portraits had been swapped out. At one level he was depicted carrying an octagonal cap and a rough woollen jacket. However even after Wang stepped down as official portrait maker in 1976, his successors continued to color similar portraits primarily based on Wang’s design, exhibiting a rosy-cheeked, grim-looking Mao together with his trademark chin mole.

However regardless of the portrait’s prominence, the artist is little recognized.

Mao Zedong’s portrait above the Gate of Heavenly Peace in Beijing in 1973, when Wang Guodong was liable for portray it. The portraits are recurrently changed.
John Bulmer /
Getty Photographs

“No one is allowed to place their names on that portray,” Wang defined in an interview with The Los Angeles Occasions in 2006. “It’s that means earlier than, and it’s that means now.”

Wang appeared to not thoughts. For him, anonymity got here with the job of making what one outstanding artwork historian known as “crucial portray in China.”

However like many who lived by way of the turbulence of Mao’s totalitarian rule, Wang was not all the time in such good standing with the occasion.

Throughout the Cultural Revolution, the last decade lengthy interval of political tumult that convulsed the nation from 1966 to 1976, Mao’s picture was prominently displayed in thousands and thousands of houses, colleges, factories and authorities buildings throughout the nation. Because the chief’s character cult grew, Wang discovered himself underneath assault by the coed militants generally known as Crimson Guards, who persecuted anybody they thought-about ideologically impure or insufficiently dedicated to Mao.

They known as Wang a capitalist due to his household background, and so they criticized him for portray Mao from an angle that confirmed just one ear. This, they stated, implied that Mao was listening to solely a choose few, not the plenty.

“What number of ears I painted was less than me,” Wang later defined. “It was determined by the central authorities.” He stated all the artists who painted Mao did so primarily based on a government-issued photograph and had been instructed to not deviate from it.

A portrait of the late Chinese language chief Mao Zedong is seen on the market at a vendor’s stand at a market on September 7, 2014 in Beijing, China.
Kevin Frayer /
Getty Photographs

Nonetheless, Wang was subjected to a so-called wrestle session, by which he was introduced onto a stage and publicly humiliated. Mosquitoes had been swarming round him, however “I didn’t even dare to swat them away,” he recalled in a 2004 interview with a Chinese language journal.

As punishment, Wang was despatched by authorities to work as a carpenter in a framing manufacturing facility for 2 years. However he was allowed to maintain his title, and he continued to color the official portrait, this time with two ears.

Within the 1970s, Wang chosen 10 Beijing artwork college students as apprentices. They had been screened first for his or her political reliability and second for his or her inventive potential. They had been taught the fundamentals of portrait portray and discovered keep inside the boundaries of political acceptability.

“Mao’s face should be painted additional pink to point out his sturdy spirit,” Liu Yang, one of many college students, informed The Los Angeles Occasions in 2006. “It will possibly by no means be too yellow, which would appear sickly, like he hadn’t eaten in days. You might be accused of being a counterrevolutionary.”

Solely as soon as, after Mao’s loss of life in 1976, was a black-and-white portrait of the chairman held on the Gate of Heavenly Peace. Wang retired that yr.

To the occasion, it symbolizes the occasion and the nation’s founding. However to lots of people it symbolizes China, or it has very private reminiscences

Since then, in step with custom, the portrait has been changed with a brand new one yearly, underneath cowl of darkness, simply earlier than Nationwide Day celebrations on Oct. 1.

Wang Guodong was born June 25, 1931, in Beijing. Little could possibly be decided about his youth or his household life. His loss of life was reported by Chinese language state media. His survivors embody two sons.

The Mao portraits, nonetheless primarily based on a model designed by Wang, have diverse little in current a long time. Every is seen by thousands and thousands of vacationers yearly as they go to Tiananmen Sq. and the Palace Museum.

The portraits have been vandalized a number of occasions, together with throughout the pro-democracy protests in Tiananmen Sq. in 1989, when three younger demonstrators pelted one with ink-filled eggs. Hours later, the defaced portrait was taken down and changed with a spare. The protesters served prolonged jail sentences.

“It’s a really complicated picture,” Wu Hung, an artwork historian on the College of Chicago, stated of the portray in a 2006 New York Occasions article. “It has completely different meanings to completely different folks. To the occasion, it symbolizes the occasion and the nation’s founding. However to lots of people it symbolizes China, or it has very private reminiscences.”

Since Mao’s loss of life and China’s subsequent financial reforms, the demand for Mao work in China has waned. However over time, artists have experimented with the once-sacred picture.

Within the late 1980s, in a delicate nod to the portrait’s artificiality, Chinese language artist Wang Guangyi depicted it overlaid with a grid construction, a method that Wang Guodong and his successors had used to repeat the portrait to scale.

Mao’s picture was additionally, famously, an inspiration for Andy Warhol, whose silk-screened pictures turned the ruthless chief into one thing of a global pop icon. In 2017, a Warhol portray of Mao offered to an unidentified Asian purchaser at a Sotheby’s public sale in Hong Kong for $12.6 million.

BEIJING (Reuters) - Reclusive Chinese painter Ge Xiaoguang’s art has gazed over one of the world’s most famous city squares for decades.

Ge Xiaoguang wipes off extra paint on a giant portrait of China's late Chairman Maozedong in his working studio located between the Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City in Beijing, June 29, 2011. REUTERS/Barry Huang

For 30 years, he has painted the portraits of former paramount leader Mao Zedong that look across Beijing’s Tiananmen Square.

The giant oil paintings of the “Great Helmsman” have kept watch from the Gate of Heavenly Peace since the Communist Party won the civil war and declared a New China on October 1, 1949.

“I feel honored to have done this all these years. It is a sacred job. The sense of duty is quite strong,” Ge said.

The paintings, now made of glass fibre and reinforced plastic, are six meters (20 feet) high and 4.6 meters (15 feet) wide, and weigh up to 1.5 tons.

Ge keeps a low-profile and has refused countless requests for interviews. But he gave Reuters access to his studio near the imposing Forbidden City ahead of Friday’s 90th anniversary of the founding of the Chinese Communist Party.

Paintbrushes in hand and standing atop a moving platform, 58-year-old Ge gently smoothes the surface of the canvas, creating an airbrushed effect that lends the chairman a benevolent glow. “The key in the portrait is to depict Chairman Mao’s presence. It’s really important to manage to show the charisma that he had as a great leader,” he said.

Born in Beijing in 1953, Ge learned to paint the large-scale portraits from his predecessor Wang Guodong.

When Wang retired in 1976 after Mao’s death, Ge formally became the fourth artist to take up the vaunted position. He now leads a team of artists that depict China’s political leaders, from Mao to current president Hu Jintao.

Ge alone paints Mao. Every year since 1977, he has created a new portrait, each one slightly different, which replaces the old one during the night between September 30 and October 1, China’s National Day. After decades of referring to archive material and photos, Ge says he knows Mao so well he does not need to spend much time sketching out the portrait.

Mao is still revered in China for uniting a vast country much of which had been divided up by warlords and foreign invaders.

But he is also blamed for the deaths of millions in the famine of the disastrous Great Leap Forward and the chaos of the Cultural Revolution.

The official verdict of his rule is that he was 70 percent good and 30 percent bad.

There has been a resurgence in recent years of nostalgia for the Mao era, with restaurants emblazoned in red featuring the fiery cuisine of his native Hunan, and busts and pins and other knickknacks featuring the chairman have long been popular features in tourist bazaars.

During the 1989 pro-democracy protests centered on Tiananmen Square, three demonstrators splattered Mao’s portrait with paint, and later received long jail terms.

Today, the tens of thousands of people that flock to the world’s largest square are greeted by Mao’s imposing portrait, which currently looks directly at a huge hammer and sickle crafted from flowers for the Party’s birthday. Even after 30 years of market reforms have made China the world’s second biggest economy, Mao is still an official ideological centerpiece of the Party at 90. Which should keep Ge in the job for some time to come.

“You must do this job right,” Ge said. “It is not just piece of art. It represents China’s spirit and the emotions of an era.”



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