細節
吳大羽
無題 - 16
油彩 畫布 裱於紙板
來源:
亞洲 私人收藏
展覽:
2007年「北京大未來開幕展」大未來畫廊 北京 中國
出版:
2006《吳大羽》大未來畫廊藝術有限公司 台北 台灣 (圖版,第59頁)
2007年《大未來 文化主體性的新東方美學》台北大未來畫廊藝術有限公司出版 台北 台灣 (圖版,第76頁)

吳大羽的人生和藝術歷程是波折和坎坷的,今天重看他流傳於世的少數油畫創作,更讓人覺得珍貴而又感觸。他的學生吳冠中、朱德群、趙無極都極力推祟他的藝術才華和哲人風範,認為「從他的畫作上,有很多進展及發現,也可看出他才華洋溢」、要把吳大羽「擺回他應得的地位」(趙無極語)、吳師終生「長耘於空漠」、「被遺忘」(吳冠中語)。朱德群和趙無極都是透過他的引介和鼓勵,而更深入了解塞尚、野獸派等的藝術理念。他也是中國第一代留學、又回校任教的油畫大師,與林風眠創立杭州藝專,是推動中國油畫發展的大旗手,在現代中國美術史,特別是油畫發展作出了巨大的貢獻。可是,偏偏由於命途乖蹇、時代之艱辛波折,吳大羽一生憂患,長期受到客觀環境的限制,一直沒有充份發揮他的才華,流傳的作品也不多。他的一生除了三十年代幾年的安定作畫生活,以後的生活不是顛沛流離、失業困頓,便是在文革被批鬥和整治。文革時間一家四口只屈居於二十平方的斗室,連作畫的地方和條件也沒有。文革以後,已是垂垂老矣,眼睛得了白內障,要動手術,作畫的時間和心境都消逝殆盡。他的三十年代的油畫創作,看過的人都印象深刻,認為其藝術境界超脫。作品都是構圖宏闊,描寫具象、人物,色彩絢麗激越,筆勢在畫布上縱橫馳騁,不同於林風眠的婉轉抒情意味,而更多是一種展現一個色感的世界,其中有色彩的躍動感和韻律性。這些作品不幸的都在戰亂中失佚。在人生最後的十數年,失去精力和體力,吳大羽只能作些小幅的油畫。可幸的是,這批油畫尺寸雖小,卻是藝術家錘鍊一生,貫注整個個人生命和思考經歷的創作,博大精深,展現畫家對油彩色彩和抽象線條的獨特探索成就。

《無題No. 16》(Lot 525)和《無題No.37》(Lot 526)分別表現吳大羽對色彩和線條的探索成就。《無題No.16》中有隱約躍動的臉容和色彩的扭動交錯,如兩個戴著京劇面譜的身影翩翩起舞,和《譜韻》這一批繪畫京劇面譜的作品十分相近。這張作品用色十分瑰麗絢爛,色域廣闊,且色彩密度和濃度十分高。畫面以青綠、普藍、墨黑的色調為主調,對立成形。每一筆色彩都光采亮麗,閃耀著光采,好像在畫面上有生命般爭妍鬥麗。可以看到他的色塊展現多層次的色調變化,各種鮮艷色彩互相交錯、併合、分裂、對立、排斥、激切地爭取著空間,彼此之間生起各種空間和層次的關係,在小小的畫面空間上展現引人入勝的視覺張力,煥發出如音樂韻律、或是舞蹈旋律的動感,畫面熱鬧非凡。畫家像是以幾何、線條、色彩等藝術最基本的元素來構識出一個純藝術的國度,進入這個國度裡,便會迅即被各種變化扭動、絢麗鮮豔的色彩包圍,捕獲了一剎那的意象和感受。

而《無題No. 37》是吳大羽作品中特別的一張,畫面尺寸比一般他創作的小號油畫更大和修長,所以作品構圖上有更多道貫穿畫面、氣勢激越的縱直線條,讓人更細緻的看到吳大羽在表現色彩以外,如何透過線條來表現具中國書法韻味的筆勢和氣象。畫面有很自由激越的構圖方式,但也有很嚴密緊湊的組織,先以中間幾道直筆來統馭畫面,畫面底部有幾道粗厚雄健的墨黑曲線,再交錯著下角赤紅、宗黃色調寫成的幾道橫線和修長條面,線面和色塊互相牽引,既分且合,若聚若散,如畫家所說是有一種色彩攢動的「勢象」,好像有韻律流動於色塊之間,又深刻反映畫家胸中萬千氣魄、自由奔放的個性。畫面有吳大羽最愛選用普藍色調的大筆皴擦、潑染。普藍是其他畫家很少選用的顏色,因為着色力太强、太深、乾得也較快,難以作修改。但吳大羽作畫在下筆之先已有完整的構圖概念,所以能一下筆就為他的色彩世界塑形,也有能力使用烈性顏色去表達。在中晚期以後的創作可見,因為對色彩,色彩的勢態都有了長時間的思考和感悟,他已無須小心去塑造形體,只是感其所感,下筆至收筆,一氣呵成,而色彩的配合又是渾然一體。吳大羽的抽象油畫著意於色彩、線條的表現力量,這和50年代歐美盛行、德.杜庫寧(Willem De Kooning, 1904-1997)及普洛克(Jackson Pollock, 1912 – 1956)為代表的「抽象表現派」有異曲同工之妙。但吳大羽的線條和色彩撥染便有更多中國書畫的韻味,有像張旭草書般的狂飆線條和色彩,寫來氣勢靈動,但細緻地看,每一部份都婉延流麗,有一種情韻在其中,而不會流於粗豪之病。
來源
Private Collection, Asia
出版
Lin & Keng Gallery, Inc., Wu Dayu, Taipei, Taiwan, 2006 (illustrated, p. 59).
Lin & Keng Gallery Inc., Lin & Keng Cultural Subjectivity of Oriental Aesthetics, Taipei, Taiwan, 2007 (illustrated, p. 76).

展覽
Beijing, China, Lin & Keng Gallery, Grand Opening Exhibition, 2007.

登入
瀏覽狀況報告

拍品專文

Today, viewing the few extant oil paintings by Wu Dayu against the background of his harshly difficult life and career serves to remind us all the more of their preciousness. Wu Dayu was an artist who numbered among his students such figures as Wu Guanzhong, Chu Teh-chun, and Zao Wou-ki; these great artists have praised his genius and his philosophical ideals, pointing out "the number of advances and discoveries to be found in his paintings, and the exceptional talent they exude." In the words of Zao Wou-ki, Wu Dayu "should be restored to his rightful status." According to Wu Guanzhong, Wu Dayu was limited by "trying to reap a harvest from an arid land," and as an artist, "has been forgotten." Wu Dayu encouraged artists such as Chu Teh-chun and Zao Wou-ki to become familiar with the concepts of Cezanne and the Fauves; he was one of the first generation of Chinese artists to study abroad, and upon his return, to take up teaching as an accomplished master of the oil medium; and, along with Lin Fengmian, he founded the Hangzhou Academy of Art. In short, Wu Dayu was one of the great standard-bearers in the development of oil painting in China, and in that medium in particular made great contributions to its art history. But fate was less than kind to Wu Dayu; he lived in a difficult era that that brought frustration and hardship, and because complete fulfillment of his talent was obstructed by objective conditions, relatively few works are now left to us. Aside from a few years during the '30s when he could create in relative peace, Wu passed his life in distressing circumstances, sometimes destitute, and later, as a victim of struggle sessions and political reform during the Cultural Revolution. During that period, his family of four lived in a small, 20- meter-square room with no space or facilities for painting, and by the time the Cultural Revolution had ended, Wu was an old man. His eyes were filled with cataracts, and after an operation, precious little time or energy remained for painting. Those who saw his early paintings from the '30s have spoken of their impressive originality. The compositions had breadth and scale, featuring human figures and non-abstract forms, with brushstrokes that flew in all directions across the canvas to create beautiful and intense patterns of color. Where Lin Fengmian exhibited lyricism and tactful reserve, Wu displayed a world filled with rich color and feeling, drawing on all the hues of his palette to create soaring and harmonious rhythms. Unfortunately, Wu Dayu's works from this earlier period were either lost or destroyed during wartime, and during the last decade of his life, as his spirits and his physical energy were fading, Wu Dayu produced only a few small-scale works. Yet small scale though they are, we are fortunate that these works contain the distilled thought and experience of a lifetime spent honing his abilities and perceptions. They convey both breadth of vision and the artist's exceptional success in exploring abstract lines and rich color in the oil medium.

Untitled No. 16 (Lot 525) and Untitled No. 37 (Lot 526) respectively exhibit just those qualities of color and line over which Wu Dayu had such mastery. In the twisting and intertwined lines of Untitled No. 16, faces seem to emerge indistinctly, as if two figures in Beijing opera makeup were whirling and dancing within the lines, recalling Wu's series of paintings on Beijing opera themes, Composing Rhymes. In Untitled No. 16, Wu Dayu uses a broad range of brilliant and beautiful colors high in both density and intensity. The composition is built up from the opposition of dark greens, Prussian blues, and coal black tones. Each stroke of color glows and pulsates with radiance, as if the painting itself were a living entity striving to call our attention to its beauty. Multilayered shadings form within Wu's blocks of individual color as various bright tones overlap, coalesce, break apart, conflict, and strive vehemently for their place in the composition, which in the process, create the many layerings and spatial relationships within the canvas. The result is an enticing visual tension, even within the small dimensions of this canvas, that bursts with musical energy and rhythm and dancelike movement. With the most fundamental elements at his command-lines, colors, geometric shapes-the artist creates a pure aesthetic world that immediately enfolds the viewer within its shifting and mutating shapes and its brilliant and beautiful color, evoking instantaneous impressions of images and feelings.

Wu's Untitled No. 37 is an unusual work in being both larger than most of his oils and longer in its vertical dimension. The resulting composition features a number of powerful vertical lines coursing through it, and the viewer senses that, beyond his special way with color, the artist is using line to express the same graceful energy of brush and the atmosphere of Chinese calligraphy. While the composition has great freedom and energy, it also has a tightly controlled organization, deriving first from several straight lines from the center, bringing coherence to the work, while the thick, vigorous lines in coal black curve to intersect with horizontal lines and planes in red and brown in the lower corners. The lines and planes of color pull at each other, almost merging then dispersing in different directions, in what the artist called "images of impulse" with the power of color, reflecting his own free spirit and audacious vision in the midst of the rhythmically moving color fields. This work also features the Prussian blue hues that Wu Dayu was so partial to, applied here, in jagged and splashing strokes. Very few other artists have favored this color to the same degree; the depth and intensity of its coloring power and its quick drying characteristic, making revision difficult. But Wu Dayu already had well-formed compositions in mind before setting to work, and given his ability to use the most intense colors in their expression, his special worlds of color exploded into existence, the instant he set his brush in motion. The works of his middle and late periods display an awareness of color and its dynamics that could only be realized through long periods of observation and discovery; there was little need for careful shaping of forms when the artist's feelings could be channeled so directly through a continuous sweep of the brush into a finished work of this kind of highly developed and integral color harmony. Wu Dayu's abstract painting is founded on his sense of the expressive powers of color and line, and in its own way seems akin to the great representatives of the abstract expressionist school, Willem de Kooning (1904 - 1997) and Jackson Pollock (1912 - 1956). But Wu Dayu infused line and color with the charm of Chinese calligraphy, just as in the busy, sprawling whirl of lines in a calligraphy work by Zhang Xu; they first communicate energy and vitality, but on closer examination, every curve can be seen falling gracefully into place with a beauty of feeling that never becomes brash or uncontrolled.

更多來自 亞洲當代藝術 <BR>及 中國二十世紀藝術

查看全部
查看全部