Series on the Republic of China - Touched

2014

Oil on canvas

60 x 50 cm

Signed lower right Chen Cheng Wei in Chinese and English

Estimate
160,000 - 240,000
678,000 - 1,017,000
20,600 - 31,000
Sold Price
168,000
705,882
21,677

Ravenel Autumn Auction 2015 Hong Kong

044

CHEN Cheng Wei (Chinese, b. 1984)

Series on the Republic of China - Touched


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Catalogue Note:
In 2002, Chen Cheng Wei was admitted to Chinese Academy Of Art with the highest score of the nation, and was granted with the highest award - the Academy Award - by the Chinese Academy of Art for the best graduation work. After finishing school, he settled in Beijing for his painting career. In 2009, he started working at the Chinese Academy of Oil Painting Department, and, influenced by oil painting masters such as Feiyun Yang, Chen studied abroad in France, Italy, and the Netherlands. Chen admires western oil painting masters such as Rembrandt. He accentuates his work with a hint of high culture, the classical, and a careful depiction of lighting, integrating Chinese elements with modernity flawlessly.

Chen Cheng Wei embraces his life. He is optimistic and progressive, and yet pushes himself quite rigorously. His friends commented that he is a workaholic, yet he joked that it is only his OCD at work, forcing him to paint every day. He once said, "When studying the masterpieces, you first have to know which elements suit your style, and then find the balance between emulating and creating. Otherwise, you'd either be like a copycat or seem inexperienced." Chen's works reflect this belief. While they are full of emotions and details, everything feels natural and Chen seems to have painted them with ease. He has grand ideals and readily takes action to fulfill them. Like he said, he is still learning and discovering his ways - there is bound to be more breakthroughs.

The Republic of China series has become the representation of Chen. The depiction of sentiments is exquisite - they are felt, yet not shown; so slight, but still perceivable. He utilized glazing on semi-solid media, a technique that he cleverly learned from the artistic language of classical western masterpieces. Painted over many years, the series of "The Republic of China" is both cultural and historical, while also exhibiting a sense of modernity. Both the passage of time and the reality of the moment subtly find their ways in this work. It is also a mirror for history. The eyes, full of sentiments, touch the viewers' heart and give them an infinite space for imagination.

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