HUANG Ming-Chang was born in Ruisui, Hualien in 1952. He graduated from the Fine Arts Department of Chinese Culture University in 1975, headed for France in 1977, and received an advanced diploma in oil painting from the Paris Academy of Fine Arts in 1984. During his seven-year residence in France, Huang studied classic oil painting techniques and gained solid knowledge of realist painting. He especially liked Dutch painter Jan Vermee of the 17th century and delved deep into the artist’s works. Admiring how Vermee found peace, serenity and eternity in ordinary things, he started looking for subject matters in his life so as to observe and paint about them. Huang returned to Taiwan in 1985. With Gazing Out released in 1986, which shows the birds-eye-views of vast green rice fields from the windows of his painting studio beside the Xindian River, the many faces of rice paddies at dusk and at dawn, under the sun and clouds, and in the four seasons of a year, became the most salient subject matters in his paintings.
In Paddyfield, a series initiated in 1989 and still in progress today, green, wavy rice fields are surrounded by banana, plantain, screw pine, Chinese parasol trees and wild taros. The artist uses overlapping, refined brushstrokes and profuse colors and shades to present a misty island landscape densely grown with plants in the warm tropical south. Huang’s deep love for his land can be felt through his paintings. He not only paints about Taiwan, but also India, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Bali Island where he has traveled. He adores the abundant nature through his idyllic landscape paintings. With a consistent style, techniques and aesthetic vision, he has made series like Gazing at the Sea (1995-), Paddy and Lotus (2002-) and Heart Lake (2007-).
With an artist’s eye and a scientist’s spirit, Huang presents the many faces of rice paddies in Paddyfield series. In this painting, a cooling evening scene is shown, rather than that of a scorching hot day. As the winds blow, the rice plants gently swing along, making the rice field look like a vast wavy sea extending far and beyond. It is with a refined arrangement of light and shades and layers of green that a vivid image like this becomes possible. The vastness of this field ensures a kind of meditative serenity to the dancing rice plants. It is not only because nature’s order and vitality are so smartly woven into this painting that it is beautiful. It attracts viewers with a kind of heart-felt, soul-comforting charm.
Taiwan in the 1970s was a time of impacts. The island not only experienced a major blow in foreign relations. Hasty industrialization, urbanization, restructuring of rural villages, damage of the nature and drastic changes to the living environment all took place in one single decade. As a result, young intellectuals started to reflect upon their own conditions by looking into the island and its people. Likewise, during this time when much attention was being paid to the native land, artists joined this Nativist Movement by adopting a figural realist style.
HUANG Ming-Chang already learned western painting when he studied in an academic arts school in Taiwan. He graduated in 1975 and decided to pursue further studies overseas. Before leaving Taiwan, he made a rustic landscape series on Jiufen and Jinshan in northeastern Taiwan. His realist painting techniques advanced immensely during his seven-year residence in France, and his pursuit of temporal and spatial eternity in painting had also derived from his observations on classic oil painting during this time. For some time after he returned to Taiwan, he worked on the Interior series which depicts scenes from a homely life. When he finally resumed making landscapes in the late 1980s, photo-realism and Nativist themes were no longer hailed by the local art community. Instead, a popular neo-impressionist approach was taken to show the “Taiwan experience” and “local identity” that the public still passionately embraced. HUANG Ming-Chang however insisted on using classic oil painting techniques to make paintings with a macroscopic vision, which is different from both of the afore-mentioned methods. He has therefore established a unique landscape painting style of his own while he continues to work on the same subject matters attentively and creatively.
Chinese title: | 向晚(水稻田系列) |
English title: | Nightfall I (Paddyfield Series) |
Decade: | 1993 |
Medium / Classification: | Oil paints and Acrylic colors |
Dimensions: | 135×194 cm |
Artist: | HUANG Ming-Chang |
Life-span: | 1952 - |
Collection Unit: | Collection of the Yageo Foundation |
Contact method for authorization: | HUANG Ming-Chang Email:huangmingchang52@gmail.com
Yageo Foundation (Yageo Corporation) |
Related Exhibition: | "The Pioneers" of Taiwanese Artists, 1951-1960 |