Chua Ek Kay

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Chua Ek Kay (蔡逸溪)

Born November 21, 1947(1947-11-21)
Guangdong, China
Died February 8, 2008 (aged 60)
Singapore
Nationality Singaporean
Field Chinese ink painting
Training Taught privately by Fan Chang Tien; Lasalle-SIA College of the Arts (1990); BFA (University of Tasmania); MA (Hons) (University of Western Sydney)
Awards 1991: UOB 10th Painting of the Year Award (Grand Prize)

1998: Philip Morris Group of Companies ASEAN Art Awards, Juror's Choice
1999: Cultural Medallion for Art
2002: Lasalle-SIA College of the Arts Fellowship

Bicycles Rest at the Backlane, NUS Museums.
Bicycles Rest at the Backlane, NUS Museums.
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Chua (simplified Chinese: ; pinyin: Cài).

Chua Ek Kay (simplified Chinese: 蔡逸溪; pinyin: Cài Yìxī) (21 November 19478 February 2008) was a Singaporean artist hailed as the "bridge between Asian and Western art"[1] with a unique painting style using Chinese ink on paper that demonstrated an ingenious blend of traditional Chinese painting forms with Western art theories and techniques. Most of his works were themed of Chinatown street scenes, lotuses, and abstract works inspired by Australian aboriginal cave paintings.

Contents

[edit] Early years

Chua Ek Kay was born in Guangdong, China, on 21 November 1947, the eldest of seven children. In the 1950s, his family migrated to Singapore, and settled in Liang Seah Street. Chinese cultural influences were very much a part of his daily life and art, and as a child Chua picked up Chinese literature and poetry, and practised writing Chinese characters with his father. Even in school, he often took part in calligraphy and classical poetry activities as a student at the Catholic High School. He excelled in both areas, writing his own poems and becoming known in school for his excellent poetic calligraphy. This reputation soon spread to local calligraphy and poetic circles.

In 1975, the 28-year-old Chua became a student of Chinese brush painting and seal-carving of Singaporean master ink painter, Fan Chang Tien.

[edit] Artistic career

Though he was deeply passionate about art, Chua continued to make his living by taking on a variety of jobs. Finally, in 1985, he resigned his post as a manager of a garment factory to become a full-time artist. At the age of 38 he embarked on his artistic journey, supplementing his income as a lecturer with the Extramural Studies Department of the National University of Singapore.

He began exploring his ideas about art, breaking away from traditionalist Shanghai School-styled subjects. Remembering his childhood days in Liang Seah Street and its community, Chua found new inspirations in his paintings from mountains and lakes, to shophouses and even abstract works inspired by Australian aboriginal cave paintings.

As he explored new expressions in art, he found similarities between the Shanghai School style and the works of Western artists like Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso and Jackson Pollock in terms of artistic spontaneity. This new-found interest in Western art led him to study the subject at the Lasalle-SIA College of the Arts (now the LASALLE College of the Arts) in 1990. He was also to spend several more years engaged in a comparative study of eastern and western concepts in painting in Australia, receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) from the University of Tasmania and a Master of Arts (MA (Hons)) from the University of Western Sydney.[2][3] Nevertheless, the Chinese brush style which he had picked up earlier never left him, and its influence continued to flow in his paintings.

On 21 August 2006, Chua launched his "Street Scenes Collection" series of paintings at the Singapore Management University (SMU). Valued at S$302,000, these 30 works depict scenes of old shop houses, narrow alleyways, historic sites and other memories portraying Singapore's heritage, in his signature brush styles – a legacy of 20 years of artistic practice.[4] He officially donated this Collection to the University on 18 October 2006, in support of the University's "Visual Arts Initiative" launched earlier in the year. SMU subsequently published a book entitled Chua Ek Kay: Singapore Street Scenes, Evoking Memories (2007).[5]

Lee Boon Yang, the Minister for Information, Communications and the Arts, said of the artist: "Ek Kay has developed a unique style of his own. When one looks at his paintings, one is reminded how a simple approach to life can translate into something powerful. I find his paintings particularly interesting in the way he injects so much passion and emotion into a minimalist landscape."[6]

[edit] Aesthetics and philosophy in his art

Chua hard at work on his painting.
Chua hard at work on his painting.

When Chua was under the tutelage of Fan Chang Tien, he not only learnt the four elements of the "Shanghai School" – calligraphy, classical poetry, painting and seal-carving from his master. Fan drilled him in the principles of 花鸟 (pinyin: huā niǎo, or "flower–bird"), and enforced Chua's foundations in his art. This also intensified his interest in art, studying the aesthetics of post-Ming Dynasty masters particularly of Shih-Tao.[7]

Fan Chang Tien also reminded Chua to be expressive in whatever subject matter he painted, for there was rhythm with each stroke. This "life" in his paintings also had to come with an understanding of "black within black", expressing art through different gradations of ink tones to capture a "simplistic complexity" in the depiction of the subject matter.[2]

As he explored Western ideas in his art, he found that the difference between western and eastern art lay solely in their spirits: western art was forceful, and eastern art more introspective. He also found that the emergence of "east-west art fusion" in art adopted by pioneer Singapore artists in the 1950s and 1960s was partly due to the Cultural Revolution. That Revolution not only closed China's door from the rest of the world, it also locked away its "conventional Chinese art themes of snowy peaks and gushing rivers" that were identified with by Chinese artists overseas. Singapore artists then realized they did not really relate to these conventional art themes and they should adopt familiar subjects that they could distill through their emotion and artistry. Many artists in that period were also English-educated, and thus adopted western ideas as alternative sources of art. While Chua's creations are infused with Western artistic spontaneity, he felt that tradition continued to play an important role in breaking new ground and generating inspirations in art.[7]

Chua continued to practise Han calligraphy and ink-brush painting, as he believed that while a contemporary painting had to keep up with the times and embody an artist's temperament and the ideals he stands for, in creating art he should be rooted to certain basic rules and formats. The discipline of Chinese art helped to strengthen his lines, while western techniques helped him in the mixing of tones. These techniques formed the basis of his art.[7]

[edit] Death and tributes

Roundtable participants (from left to right) Susie Lingham (moderator, standing), Cheo Chai-Hiang, Hong Sek Chern, T.K. Sabapathy and Joanna Lee.
Roundtable participants (from left to right) Susie Lingham (moderator, standing), Cheo Chai-Hiang, Hong Sek Chern, T.K. Sabapathy and Joanna Lee.

On 8 February 2008, Chua died after having battled nasal cancer since 2004. He left behind his wife Tshi-au Yi and a son, Benson.[8]

"With Chua's passing," said Edmund Cheng, the Chairman of the National Arts Council, "Singapore has lost a great artist and a towering talent... To his friends and fellow artists, Ek Kay was a man of few words, and was always respected for his quiet confidence and humility despite his outstanding international success. Ek Kay was an exemplary artist who had left us at his peak."[6]

On 18 March 2008, The Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts paid tribute to Chua with a roundtable session titled Remembering Chua Ek Kay: Ink Painting and the Idea of the Contemporary. Using Chua's works as the basis for discussion, the forum sought to engage the audience in a discussion on the meaning of contemporary art in Singapore. Guest speaker Joanna Lee, author of Chua Ek Kay: Singapore Street Scenes, Evoking Memories (2007), together with artists Cheo Chai-Hiang and Hong Sek Chern, touched on Chua's creations and the development of his ideas over the years.

[edit] Major exhibitions

Dates Title Location
1988 A Selection of Chinese Brush Paintings and Calligraphy Extramural Studies Department, National University of Singapore
Singapore
9 September
13 September 1992
Duality and Tension National Museum Art Gallery
Singapore
1995 Recent Works by Chua Ek Kay (solo) University of Western Sydney
Sydney, Australia
20 September
23 September;
24 September
6 October 1997
Colour of Infinity (solo) Caldwell House, CHIJMES, and Art Forum
Singapore
1998 Hunter of the Wilderness (solo) Art Forum
Singapore
Philip Morris–ASEAN Art Exhibition Hanoi, Vietnam
1999 CRISP Singapore Art Museum
Singapore
Power and Poetry, Monuments and Meditations in Chinese Ink Painting Singapore Art Museum
Singapore
  • Beyond Tradition: Art of the New Migrant Chinese
  • Ambulation
Earl Lu Gallery
Singapore
1 December
31 December 2000
Lyrical Spaces (solo) Wetterling Teo Gallery
Singapore
2001 Street Scenes Revisited (solo) Soobin Gallery
Singapore
Asean Art Today 2001 Earl Lu Gallery
Singapore
Ink & Colour, 3 Singaporean Artists Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Nokia Singapore Art 2001 Singapore Art Museum
Singapore
2002 Timeless Space Damask Asia London, England, UK
2003 Chua Ek Kay: Being & Becoming: The Lotus Pond Series[9] Singapore Tyler Print Institute
Singapore
23 August
4 September 2005
逸溪 (YiXi) (solo) Shanghai Art Museum
China
19 December
22 December 2007
Along the River Banks (solo) Singapore Tyler Print Institute
Singapore

Some information in the above table was obtained from Chua Ek Kay (Singaporean, 1947): Selected exhibitions. ArtNet: The Art World Online. Retrieved on 2008-02-16.

Chua's Mural Reflections at the Clarke Quay MRT Station.
Chua's Mural Reflections at the Clarke Quay MRT Station.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Hasnita A. Majid. "Cultural Medallion winner Chua Ek Kay dies at 61", Channel NewsAsia, 2008-02-09. 
  2. ^ a b Marjorie, Chu (2003), “Chua Ek Kay – then and now”, Understanding Contemporary Southeast Asian Art, Singapore: Art Forum, pp. 83–94, ISBN 9810485751, <http://www.artforum.com.sg/artists_by_country/singapore/cek_text.pdf> .
  3. ^ Chua Ek Kay (Singaporean, 1947): Selected exhibitions. ArtNet: The Art World Online. Retrieved on 2008-02-16.
  4. ^ Chua Ek Kay gives his gift of art. SMU Hub: A Newsletter of the Singapore Management University (2006). Retrieved on 2008-02-24.
  5. ^ Chua, Ek Kay; Joanna Lee (ed.) (2007). Chua Ek Kay: Singapore Street Scenes, Evoking Memories. Singapore: Singapore Management University. ISBN 9814217298. 
  6. ^ a b "Minister, NAC pay tribute to late artist", The Straits Times, 2008-02-14. 
  7. ^ a b c Richard, Lim (ed.) (1998). Singapore Artists Speak. Singapore: Raffles Editions. ISBN 9971008637. 
  8. ^ Cheong, June. "Farewell to ex-Cultural Medallion winner", The Straits Times, 2008-02-15, p. H6. 
  9. ^ Tan, Yvonne (2003). Chua Ek Kay: Being & Becoming. Asian Art Newspaper. Retrieved on 2008-02-16.

[edit] Further reading

[edit] Articles

[edit] Books and exhibition catalogues

  • Chua, Ek Kay (1988). A Selection of Chinese Brush Paintings and Calligraphy. Singapore: E.K. Chua.  Catalogue of an exhibition presented by the Extramural Studies Department of the National University of Singapore.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (1992). Duality and Tension. Singapore: E.K. Chua.  Catalogue of an exhibition at the National Museum Art Gallery, 9–13 September 1992, sponsored by the United Overseas Bank Group, Singapore.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (1997). Colours of Infinity: Paintings Inspired by Journeys through China, S.E. Asia, Australia, Nepal. Singapore: E.K. Chua.  Catalogue of an exhibition at Caldwell House, CHIJMES, 20–23 September 1997, and at Art Forum, Singapore, 24 September6 October 1997.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2000). Chua Ek Kay: Lyrical Spaces, 1st-31st December 2000. Singapore: Wetterling Teo Gallery.  Exhibition catalogue.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2000). Paintings by Chua Ek Kay: collection of Merrill Lynch International Private Client Group, Asia Pacific. Singapore: Merrill Lynch.  Exhibition catalogue.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2002). An exhibition of paintings by Shan Fan & Chua Ek Kay. London: Damask Asia.  Exhibition catalogue.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2003). Chua Ek Kay: Being and Becoming. Singapore: Singapore Tyler Print Institute. 
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2005). Recent Paintings of Chua Ek Kay (逸溪). Singapore: Singapore Art Museum. 
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2006). Chua Ek Kay at Art Forum 2006. Singapore: Art Forum.  Exhibition catalogue.
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2007). Chua Ek Kay: Along the River Banks. Singapore: Singapore Tyler Print Institute. 
  • Chua, Ek Kay (2007). Chua Ek Kay: Lotus Pond & Water Village (蔡逸溪: 荷塘净界, 水乡洄荡). Singapore: Cape of Good Hope. 
  • Chua, Ek Kay; Joanna Lee (ed.) (2007). Chua Ek Kay: Singapore Street Scenes, Evoking Memories. Singapore: Singapore Management University. ISBN 9814217298. 


Persondata
NAME Chua, Ek Kay
ALTERNATIVE NAMES
SHORT DESCRIPTION Singaporean Chinese painting artist
DATE OF BIRTH 21 November 1947
PLACE OF BIRTH Guangdong, China
DATE OF DEATH 8 February 2008
PLACE OF DEATH Singapore