“Segment of Dingan sich - The Abstract Beauty in Han Qingzhen's“ will be held on May 18, 2024 at LE RIME Gallery, co-organized by 11 Contemporary Art Center and Corridor Foundation. The exhibition will feature nearly twenty of young artist Han Qingzhen's latest creations, and will run until June 17th.
Segment of Dingan sich - The Abstract Beauty in Han Qingzhen's
Abstract painting often takes intuition and imagination as the starting point of creation, rejecting symbolic and explanatory expressive techniques, and integrating and organizing form and color on the picture. Simply put, abstract painting is the art of simplifying or completely abstracting the description of any natural and real object image, and can also be called non concrete art. Its characteristic is the lack of specific description, but it uses common emotions to express the concept of painting. Its aesthetic content is based on the artist's use of a certain form, and the combination or structure of lines, colors, and other forms expresses the artist's aesthetic concept. Just like Han Qingzhen's paintings, they showcase both abstract forms of tension and a visual beauty full of dynamic rhythms.
Han Qingzhen graduated with a bachelor's degree from the Central Academy of Fine Arts and a master's degree from the Goldsmith School of Art, University of London. It is precisely because she has embraced Eastern and Western cultures and different learning philosophies during her undergraduate and graduate studies that her series of paintings have opened up a new artistic perspective for the audience with their deeply abstract visual language and expression. Especially in her own paintings, she cleverly emphasizes the use of lines, using free lines and colors that resemble light and corners as the main elements of painting. On top of the seemingly empty white background, the strokes and arbitrary writing style colors created by scraping and hooking create a manifestation of the abstract rhythm of the East. These lines and tones, like melodies of music, jump and rotate on the canvas, forming vibrant images one after another.
Photo taken at Le Rime Gallery