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Lifestyle
Print Edition> Lifestyle
UPDATED: August 11, 2008 No.33 AUG.14, 2008
The Art of the Olympic Spirit
Chinese artist uses animals to convey the Olympic message
By TANG YUANKAI
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Coinciding with the opening of the Beijing Olympic Games, a painting exhibition with an Olympic theme by Chinese painter Liu Zhong, 39, is being held in the capital. Liu has cleverly used birds and animals to illustrate his vision of the world's biggest sporting event. In one work he has painted, five parrots in the Olympic colors fly out of the Bird's Nest, while in another an elephant has its tusks decorated with the lucky cloud designs on the Beijing Olympic torch.

This is the only individual painting exhibition of a Chinese painter supported by the Beijing Organizing Committee for the Games of the XXIX Olympiad (BOCOG).

"The reason that we support Liu's exhibition during the Olympic period is that we are deeply impressed by the themes of his works, which is the care about life, nature and harmony, and his passion in participating in the Olympic cause," said Sha Chengshen, Deputy Director of the Department of the Cultural Activities under the BOCOG.

According to Sha, Liu's works convey a strong sense of protecting nature and pursuing the harmonious coexistence between man and nature, which echoes the idea of the Beijing Olympic Games-to hold a green Olympics. At the same time, Sha said Liu combines Western art with Chinese ink and wash painting, creating a new style that spans different cultural backgrounds, also in line with the Olympic message.

Childhood dream

Although his works cover a wide range of themes, Liu has special love of animals. When he was a child, he wanted to communicate with nature and all its creatures. He raised a menagerie at home, including fish, chickens, dogs, cats and even hawks and snakes.

At the age of 10, Liu participated in his first art exhibition with his work I Invented a Machine to Talk With Animals and since then he has continued with his fascination with nature.

"The animals that have been gradually squeezed out of people's vision by modern civilization make Liu's works feel approachable and full of love," said Wang Jiaxin, a Chinese poet. It is the blue skies, white clouds and vast richness in Liu's works that impel people to think deeply about the importance of nature and in a sense enlighten them, said Wang.

Artistic bloodline

Liu's parents are both artists, who gave their son a good foundation in the basic skills of traditional Chinese painting. "They asked me to observe life, think and then present things through painting," Liu said.

Through his parents, Liu was also able to have access to some of China's painting masters and their works, which played a big role in cultivating his artistic tastes.

His grandmother was also one of his teachers. As a toddler Liu lived with his grandmother in west China's Shaanxi Province. "My grandmother was a country woman who was good at making dough figurines and paper cutting," Liu said.

But apart from his family influences, it was the young boy's passion and love of art that proved to be his best teacher. "If I did not love life and painting, I would not be willing to learn painting during the time that other kids spend playing," Liu said. In his eyes, painting was his fun during those formative years.

Blend East with West

"I am an omnivorous animal, " said Liu."I try to absorb the essence of the fine arts works of painting masters both in China and abroad, including some young artists."

In 1994, recommended by friends, Liu was admitted by the National and International Art Research College in France where he gained a master's degree in 1996. During his time in Paris he immersed himself in galleries and museums, especially the Louvre.

"When I returned to China, I had a new understanding of traditional Chinese painting," Liu said. His works were now vastly different from what Chinese people were used to. From the form of the painting to the images in his works, from perspective to light, his works looked more like Western paintings.

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