LI HUAYI (B. 1948)
LI HUAYI (B. 1948)

Mountains in Morning Mist

Details
LI HUAYI (B. 1948)
Mountains in Morning Mist
Scroll, mounted and framed, ink and colour on paper
188.5 x 97 cm. (74 1/4 x 38 1/4 in.)
Inscribed and signed, with two seals of the artist
Dated spring, wuzi year (2008)
Literature
Weng Ling and Shen Kuiyi, Exhibitions Catalogue for Images of the Mind: The Ink Painting of Li Huayi & Beyond Representation: Li Huayi’s New Art, Beijing Center for the Arts Publishing House, Hong Kong, 2011, p. 149.
Illusion / Image: Contemporary Chinese Ink Art Series 1, Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, 2013, p. 41.
Edward Fung, Li Huayi, Landscapes From A Master’s Heart, Milan: Rizzoli International Publications Inc, Hong Kong: Kwai Fung Art Publishing House, 2018, p. 111.
Shawn Eichman, Contemporary Landscapes: Li Huayi, The Honolulu Museum of Art, Hawaii, 2019, p. 53.
Exhibited
Beijing, Beijing Center for the Arts, Beyond Representation: Li Huayi’s New Art, 23 April-1 June 2011.
Beijing, Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Illusion / Image: Contemporary Chinese Ink Art Series 1, 22 June-22 July 2013.
Hawaii, Honolulu Museum of Art, Contemporary Landscapes: Li Huayi, 24 August 2019-5 January 2020.

Brought to you by

Carmen Shek Cerne (石嘉雯)
Carmen Shek Cerne (石嘉雯) Vice President, Head of Department, Chinese Paintings

Lot Essay

Emanating the monumentality of Northern Song landscape paintings nearly a millennium later, Li’s Mountains in Morning Mist encompasses a remarkable personal expression in an exquisite modernist style. From afar, as if the viewer is standing on a nearby summit, Mountains in Morning Mist yields a riveting, ethereal impression with its rugged mountains and wispy clouds. Forming the yin-yang symbol as a result of their animated entanglement and marked contrast in luminosity, the curving of the bank of clouds against the hook-shaped sierra evokes enlivening wonder. Amid the mist-silhouetted mountains, the juxtaposition of solid volume and airy mass becomes ever-shifting and enigmatic. Meanwhile, the verdant trees at the centre announce a rooted, vibrant presence; their miraculous growth on the precipice, besides symbolising robustness and resilience, encapsulates natural spontaneity. Such serendipity further prevails in Li’s method of creating the inky massifs – in a manner reminiscent of Jackson Pollock’s gestural abstraction, Li first splashes ink, then tilts and stretches the paper to realise the mountains. Apart from imparting movement through the subjects of Mountains in Morning Mist, Li instils qi, or “life energy”, into his work.

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