黄山之峰
画家千嶂手中的那支笔表现得轻松自如,山水、花鸟、任务,无所不能,尤其精于“花脸”的表现。
The painting brush of the Chinese artist Qianzhang paints easily: mountains, waters, flowers, birds, human figures – there is simply nothing that the brush fails to paint. Above all, it feels most at home when painting hualian.
“花脸”,又称为“净”,是戏曲表演中的一个行当。京剧中的净分为正净、副净和武净。人物的忠、奸、善、恶、侠义都可从那张脸上表现出来,它的本身就是一种符号化的立体艺术。把这种立体艺术移栽在纸上,使之变为平面艺术的,在画界也不乏其人。一种是依样画葫芦,在纸上画着真真切切的脸谱,另一种是戏曲人物画,把特定的脸谱和特定的人物结合起来,颇有舞台速写的韵味。
Hualian, also known as jing, is a major role in China’s theatrical performing tradition. In Peking Opera jing includes the categories of leading, assisting and military jing. A particular way of painting jing’s face represents a particular identity of the concerned role in a play: it may be a loyal, wicked or good man, or a villain, or a chivalrous hero. The masked face itself is a symbolized work of stereoscopic art. The effort of transplanting stereoscopic art on paper to produce works of plane art is not an isolated phenomenon in the art community. Such work, more often than not, follows one of the two approaches, one of which is to create on paper an exact copy of a masked face, and the other to paint a theatrical figure portrait, casting a particular figure in a mask, quite similar to the work of stage sketches.
而千嶂笔下的花脸不是这样,他离开了特定的人物、特定的脸谱、特定的剧情,以超越的视野,横扫大笔,洋洋洒洒,把花脸画的更加抽象化,夸大了花脸的象征意义,进入一个试图表现人类心灵的全新境界。在进行这种艺术探索时,画家有着独到的悟性和心得。他跳开了传统戏剧花脸的那种凝固的程式,为古老的花脸艺术架起了通向现代人心理的桥梁,泼写着人世间的喜怒哀乐。这个从平面到立体的过程,形成了时空艺术的瞬间闪现,天真烂漫而不悖理性精神的美学,使画家的思想自由驰翔,令其笔下生辉。
Qianzhang’s hualian, nevertheless, represents a different approach to painting. Feeling himself from the rigid commitment of being truthful to stereotypical theatrical figures, masks and plots, he paints quite freely and skillfully. His more liberal vision gives birth to the kind of hualian which is characteristically more abstract and more lavishly exaggerated in terms of its symbolic meaning. In this brand-new realm the artist attempts to best reveal the mind and soul of mankind. In his search for a particular mask-painting art, the artist works with a unique understanding for his object of creation. Ignoring the frozen traditional formula, the artist remains dedicated to constructing a bridge that connects the ancient art of hualian mask painting with the psychology of the modern man, brushing out human joys and sorrows. The transition of the theatrical mask art from a plane form to the present stereoscopic model represents the instantaneous flashes of the so-called time-space art.