Chen Yifei

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Chen Yifei (Chinese: 陈逸飞; April 12, 1946 - April 10, 2005) was a famous Chinese classic-style painter, art director and film director.

Achievements

Chen Yifei is a central figure in the development of Chinese oil painting and is one of China's most renowned contemporary artists. Although he was denounced for "capitalist behavior" Chen's obvious talent and mastery of oil painting techniques won him recognition by the authorities. Chen soon became one of the leading painters of the Cultural Revolution. He was famous for his big Mao Zedong portraits and depiction of grand heroic events of the modern Chinese nation. After the Cultural Revolution, Chen became the forerunner of a new age in Chinese aesthetics, promoting a new sense of modernity and lifestyle in his paintings as well as in fashion, cinema and design. In his oil paintings Chen abandoned his uncritical glorification of the party to blend realistic technique and romanticism with Chinese subject matter, especially melancholic and lonely women in traditional dresses. His characteristic "Romantic Realism" paintings use dark and dense colors and convey a sense of richness and integrity.

In 1980 he became one of the first artists from the People's Republic of China permitted to study art in the United States. Chen Yifei enrolled at Hunter College and later found work as an art restorer. In 1983, before he attained his master's degree at Hunter, his solo exhibition at the Hammer Galleries was a great success. Later, he established as a contract artist for the Hammer Galleries.

Chen returned to China and settled in Shanghai in 1990. He painted Impressionist landscapes of Tibet and his native Zhejiang Province. At the same time, he had also transformed himself into a style entrepreneur, creating fashion brands, decorating hotels and selling high-end clothing and chic home furnishings. He also supervised one of the country's biggest modeling agencies. Some critics said he turned increasingly commercial.

In 2005, while working on a feature film, "Barber," Chen fell ill and died. His early death left intellectual circles in shock and highlighted his major role in the Chinese contemporary art scene.

Biography

Early life

Chen was born in Ningbo of the coastal province of Zhejiang. Later, the Chen family moved to Shanghai and Chen began his studies of Russian artists and Socialist Realism to promote his talent in a lucrative field.

Early career

Chen graduated from the High School for Art in Shanghai in 1964, then graduated from the Shanghai Training School of Art (also called the Shanghai College of Art) in 1965 and soon after began focusing almost exclusively on oil painting. Within a year, as the Cultural Revolution gained steam, Chen caught the attention of Communist officials for his propaganda works that frequently glorified soldiers of the Communist party and portrayed grand images of Mao Zedong. Chen was soon viewed as "one of the leading artists at the state-financed Shanghai Institute of Painting."[1] Chen was fortunate to gain notoriety early in his career. As the Cultural Revolution ended in 1976, Chen continued doing oil paintings, now shifting his focus to a more romantic and European style. Many admire that Chen was "one of the first artists to bridge the gap between the art of the Cultural Revolution and Western contemporary art".[1]

In the 1970s, with his fame rising due to his oil works, Chen began to attract the attention of Western buyers. One such buyer, Armand Hammer, Chairman of the Occidental Petroleum Corporation in the United States, purchased Chen's Hometown Recall as a gift for Deng Xiaoping.

In 1980 Chen left his position as head of the Oil Painting Department of the Shanghai Painting Academy in China to explore the art scene of New York, being one of the first artists of the People's Republic of China allowed out of the state to study art in the USA.[2][3] Chen often told interviewers that he arrived in New York "with only $38 in his pocket" but still managed to catch the attention of gallery owners early after arrival. Although he was successful as an artist in China, he ventured to the United States, not to necessarily make his print on the art establishment, but to explore his own predilections of artistic style. The New York art scene offered him freedom to experiment and settle in a style that he could be comfortable with. Chen expressed "elat[ion] by the freedom to look at art" and explore his own boundaries[4] He gained entrance at Hunter College in the US after he arrived and worked as an art restorer. By 1983, before graduating from Hunter College, Chen's solo exhibitions at the Hammer Galleries had promoted his fame to where he later signed a contract to paint for Hammer Galleries. Chen then graduated from Hunter College in 1984 with a Master's in Art.

Career

In 1990, Chen returned to China, settling in Shanghai. Critics of Chen's work say that this time period marked when Chen became a more commercial artist. The early 1990s denoted a point when Chen's art was selling for record breaking prices in big name galleries. In the early 1990s, Chen also began building his name as businessman, investing in a magazine called the "Shanghai Tatler," his Layefe fashion brands and later home design brands, and a restaurant in Xintiandi.[2] Chen also began his film production career in 1993.

In 1994, Chen started his long standing friendship and partnership with Gilbert Lloyd of the Marlborough Fine Art gallery who acted as his art-dealer until his death.

In the last part of Chen's life, he devoted his time increasingly to acting as a "style entrepreneur" working as modeling agent, fashion designer and decorator as well as focusing on his film productions.

Art

Style and content

Chen worked primarily in oil painting that portrayed his sense of romanticism and realism combined. His works frequently featured beautiful women in traditional Chinese attire working with musical instruments or other romanticized objects. There are many examples of this brand of painting including Young Cellists (1984) and Two Women and Fan (2003). Other works featuring Chinese women in traditional clothing include Beauty (Blue/Red) (1998), Beauty with Fan (2002), Group of Beauties with Fans (2004), Seated Beauty with Fan (1998), and Reclining Beauty (1997)[5] The realism of Chen's works often evokes a photographic or cinematic feeling, inspired by the framing, lighting and positioning of the paintings.

In addition to painting the female form, some of Chen's earlier works were often more impressionistic landscape paintings done in his own style, such as his piece Shadow from 1983 in which a scene of a canal in absence of human life is painted in muted tones. Chen first received inspiration for this works when he travelled to Europe in the summer of 1982 and explored the canals, noting similarity in the ambience between the East and West. He later returned to Zhejiang and explored, what he considered, "Venice of the East" for more inspiration.[6] His landscapes often featured similar scenes of canals inspired by the canals of Venice, Italy as well as the canals of his hometown in Zhejiang province.

"Official" art

Chen's artistic career began soon after graduating from the Shanghai College of Art when his realistic style of oil painting caught the attention of Communist officials. Chen painted many famous portraits of Mao in heroic, glorified positions. One of these works, Seizing of the Presidential Palace (1977) received great favor in the Communist party, earning a place in the great halls around China. The picture is an historical epic depiction of a group of soldiers raising a red flag, representative of the history of the Revolution. His work Eulogy of the Yellow River, completed in 1972, is still considered one of his most commercially successful works, featuring his singular techniques in expressive brushstrokes that create a realistic view of a soldier standing above a yellow-toned valley, turned to face the viewer. The work was originally inspired by a poem (written by Guang Weiran) and a song (composed by Xian Xinghai).[6] The work was first presented to the public in 1977 at the United Armies Art Exhibition when Chen was 25 years old.[7] The revelation of this work marked a pivotal point in Chen's artistic career, propelling his art into further success in the future. In 2007, two years after the artist's death, Eulogy of the Yellow River sold at The China Guardian 2007 Spring Auction of Oil Painting and Sculptures for a record high of RMB 40.28 million, breaking both Chen's previous world record high sale and the national record for Chinese oil paintings.[7]

In 1979, Chen painted Looking at History from My Space, a piece that critics consider of Chen's work consider "one of his most original works".[1] The painting features the artist standing in front of a large mural of painted events from the 1910s and 1920s, symbolically representing the artist trying to distance himself from the history, to examine his own place in history.

Realism

Along with his predilection for painting women, Chen painted a series of realistic works featuring people of Tibet; the series was called "Tibet." To gather intelligence and insight on the people and customs of Tibet, Chen spent some time in the 1980s exploring Jiangnan. The works that followed his excursion held true to his highly realistic brand of painting, but travelled away from only painting the most beautiful forms of life. His "Tibet" works feature the tanned and coarse Tibetan people with no pretense of activity and muted expressions.[6] One of the most famous works from this series was called Upland Wind (sometimes called Wind of Mountain Village) and was painted in 1994. The painting features a family of Tibetan travelers, heavily clothed and layered (to convey a sense of coldness) in traditional Tibetan styles. The painting was initially auctioned at the China Guardian 1994 Autumn Auctions, selling for a record high price of 2.86 million Yuan. At the time, this was a record for Chinese oil paintings. Again in May 2011 the painting was auctioned off for 81.65 million Yuan, beating the record again for highest selling oil painting as well as beating his own record for highest selling work.[8]

Acclaim and criticism

His works are hailed as being a unique combination of both Western and Eastern influences. Chen's style combines the realism associated with European art styles, with Eastern subject matter and themes close to the artist's history. One such example of this unique blend is his painting Poppy which derives its content from a Tang dynasty song about a woman who solemnly questions her fate. The painting features a Chinese woman in traditional Chinese garb, yet the style of painting coupled with her posture are more reminiscent of ancient Greek artworks than Tang dynasty works. His Eastern-Western fusion of artistic styles is apparent in another of his famous paintings called Soiree, which depicts Chinese musicians in traditional Chinese apparel, embodying an obvious Eastern theme, but the atmosphere of the painting aligns more with the Western ideal of "carpe diem".[clarification needed][4]

Critics of Chen's work comment that his works lack and edge possibly due to his commercialization. Chen, however, viewed his entrepreneurship and businessman-like approach to art as an extension of what he truly loved: beauty. In answering a question regarding his work, Chen is quoted to have said: "I love paintings, clothing and films because they are all beautiful things".[9]

Complete list of exhibitions[5]

  • 2006 Summer Exhibition, Marlborough Fine Art Ltd., London, England
  • 2006 Fiction@Love, MOCA Shanghai, Shanghai, China
  • 2005 Chen Yifei (1946–2005), Marlborough Fine Art, Ltd, London, England (solo)
  • 2005 Chen Yifei (1946–2005), Marlborough Galerie AG, Zurich (solo)
  • 2003 Oeuvres Récentes, Marlborough Monte-Carlo, Monaco (solo)
  • 2001 Galerie Wimmer, Munich, Germany (solo)
  • 2001 Initial Image, Yibo Gallery, Shanghai, China
  • 1999 New Works, Marlborough Gallery, New York, NY (solo)
  • 1997 Paintings of Tibet, Pavilion of the People's Republic of China, XLVII Venice Biennale (solo)*1997 Chen Yifei, Première Exposition en France, Musée Granet, Aix-en-Provence, France (solo)
  • 1996-1997 First London Exhibition, Marlborough Fine Art, London, England (solo)
  • 1996-1997 The Homecoming of Chen Yifei, Shanghai Museum, Shanghai, China; The China National Museum of Fine Arts, Beijing, China (solo, retrospective)
  • 1990 Recent Paintings, Seibu Museum, Tokyo, Japan (solo)
  • 1990 Hammer Galleries, New York, NY (solo)
  • 1988 Hammer Galleries, New York, NY (solo)
  • 1986 Hammer Galleries, New York, NY (solo)
  • 1983 New England Center for Contemporary Art, USA (solo)
  • 1983 Hammer Galleries, New York, NY (solo)
  • 1982 New England Center for Contemporary Art, USA (solo)
  • 1981 New England Center for Contemporary Art, USA (solo)
  • 1980 New England Center for Contemporary Art, USA (solo)

Film

In 1993 Chen entered the film production industry with an autobiographical film named "Old Dream at Sea: Personal Recollections on Chen Yifei."[10] Chen delved further into his career in film production in 1995 with his first feature entitled "A Date at Dusk" which was featured in the Cannes Film Festival. The film was about the 1930s in Shanghai.

In 2002 Chen began preparations for his film "Barber" (also known as "The Music Box"). The production of the film halted in 2003 when Chen reported to have issues with one of the leading actors, Jiang Wen. The film began production in February 2003 when Chen Kun was brought in to replace Jiang Wen as a leading actor. Filming for "Barber" was still in progress when Chen became ill and died of a gastric haemorrhage in April 2005. There have been recurring plans to finish the film.

Fashion and home design

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Chen's fashion brand Layefe (a play on his first name) launched in 1998, followed in 2000 by the emergence of Layefe Home, his designer homeware line.

The late artist's original intent in producing and designing a fashion line was to provide affordable but beautiful clothing to his home country. After spending time out of the country and gaining more perspective for his own personal tastes in beauty, Chen noticed a lack of style in his homeland and vouched to remedy the problem by creating a clothing line that embodied his own sense of Western-Eastern fusion. With Layefe he aimed to "provide beautiful and affordable clothing for Chinese women"[11]

Layefe Home has a similar mission in providing beautiful things for the average citizen. Layefe Home offers a variety of kitchenware products and home decorative products that infuse quality with modern style. Although the pieces of this collection have been considered "fairly expensive," they present a unique brand of quality and modernity to the market.[12]

Social life

Chen Yifei had an active social life, living life as a sort of celebrity in Shanghai due to his successes in art, fashion and business. He often appeared in local tabloids if not for his accomplishments as an artist and businessman, then for gossip about his alleged "affairs with models"[2]

Chen has two sons; one, Chen Ling, from his first marriage and another from his second marriage. Chen's second son from his second marriage, Chen Tian, was to a former model named Song Meiying.[2]

Chen was a notably personable man and was one of the few celebrities who liberally gave out his cellular phone number to reporters[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Barboza, David. "Chen Yifei, 59, Painter and Entrepreneur, Dies." New York Times. 14 April 2005
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "Versatile artist Chen Yifei dies at 59." Shenzhen Daily. 11 April 2005. Web.
  3. The Atlasphere: "The Art of Chen Yifei"
  4. 4.0 4.1 Fram-Cohen, Michelle. "The Painting of Chen Yifei." Monadnock Review.
  5. 5.0 5.1 ArtNet.com- Chen Yifei Biography
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Jasmine Fine Art: The cultural nostalgia of Chen Yifei
  7. 7.0 7.1 " Eulogy of the Yellow River, Chen Yifei's Reputation-Founding Work, Breaks Records at RMB 40.32 Million."
  8. China.org: Chen Yifei painting sells for record high
  9. Rappolt, Mark. "Chen Yifei: Memorial Exhibition at Marlborough Fine Art." Modern Painters. December 2005/ January 2006. Pg 126.
  10. China Realism: Obituary
  11. Tsui, Christine. China Fashion: Conversations with Designers. Berg, 15 February 2010. 190. Print.
  12. Shanghai Daily News via English Eastday: "Layefe Home Carries On."

External links