Ho Chao-chu was born in Hsinchu, 1931. His father Ho Hsin-yen was a painter of Buddhist painting. Under his father’s influence, the artist has enjoyed painting since he was a child. After graduating from the National Chutung Senior High School in 1949, he enrolled in the Fine Arts Department of Taipei Teachers College and completed the studies in 1952. Ho was selected for the prestigious Tai-yang Art Exhibition and the Provincial Fine Arts Exhibition when he was still a student. He received the Tai-yang Award for Child and Bird in 1960. In the years to come, he would have bagged many other awards including the Honorable Mention from the 15th Provincial Fine Arts Exhibition for Back Street, the Grand Prize from the Provincial Teaching Faculty Fine Arts Exhibition for After the Rain, and the Golden Nobility Award in oil painting in 1971. An established painter, Ho has served as a juror in major fine arts competitions in Taiwan. Ho’s painting career can be divided into four stages. From 1953 to 1961, he followed first-generation painters in creating plein-air and still life paintings. As modern western painting was introduced to Taiwan in the 1960s, Ho also began to experiment on the abstract and the figurative using color masses. By the 1970s, he was able to create artworks with the masterly use of colors and lines. Until today, Ho still breaks down the painted surface and applies color masses a lot. He has an excellent command of painting with palette knives. With time, he has grown to like brighter colors, too.
Ho was awarded the second prize at the 19th Provincial Fine Arts Exhibition for Flower and Fruits. This is among the works he created when he was introduced to the modern painting movement in the 1960s. The artist turned the still-life objects into color planes of red, yellow and blue accompanied by succinct brushstrokes. The simple, highly colorful areas of paint are extremely eye-catching, the smooth, rhythmic brushstrokes are stabilizing, and the mature composition indicates how confident and expressive the artist was when he created this work.
Ho Chao-chu was born in Taiwan during the Japanese Rule. Educated by the Japanese, Ho has grown into a conscientious and careful person with a good command of the Japanese language. He started receiving education in Mandarin Chinese in 1945 and enrolled in the Fine Arts Department of Taipei Teachers College to study his beloved painting art. Ho has devoted himself to creating paintings ever since. Because there was warfare and social uproar during his youthful years, Ho witnessed how art and culture can be changed in the most drastic way. Nevertheless, he decided to take steady steps in establishing a painting career when the war ended. Based on the many plein-air painting practices, he took up a cubist painting style using plentiful lines and color masses, and gradually turned to a semi-abstract style as abstractionism became the vogue. He uses palette knives, brushes and oil paint to present his poetic inner world. Ho’s effort has resulted in a unique style of his own.
Chinese title: | 花與果 |
English title: | Flowers & Fruits |
Decade: | 1964 |
Medium / Classification: | Oil paints and Acrylic colors |
Dimensions: | 90.5×72.5 cm |
Artist: | Ho Chao-chu |
Life-span: | 1931 - |
Collection Unit: | Collection of the National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts |
Contact method for authorization: | Guide to the Use of Image Files and Data from the Online Collection Database |
Related Exhibition: | "The Pioneers" of Taiwanese Artists, 1931-1940 |
Related Work: | Nanzhuang Village |