服务粉丝

我们一直在努力
当前位置:首页 > 财经 >

Youth | Town portrait

日期: 来源:CHINADAILY收集编辑:CD君

A stone tablet stands at the entrance of Xianliu village, on which is written: "Xianliu village, hometown of oil painting". The village, in Tunchang county, South China's Hainan province, is surrounded by ancient trees, fertile fields, lakes, mountains, small bridges and flowing streams. Its beautiful natural scenery has attracted painters from across China, who sit dipping their brushes in ink, dotting their works with color.


▲ Students from Xianliu Village Primary School, in Tunchang county, South China's Hainan province, learn sketching and improve their hands-on skills in an art class. LI TIANPING/FOR CHINA DAILY


In Xianliu village, many used to paint with oils. Villagers worked during the harvest season, but in their spare time they would make oil paintings expressing their love for the village and life as a whole.


Xianliu village's oil painting tradition started in the 1980s, when a villager named Chen Youjun learned the artistic form. He went on to found the Tunchang Yanpuxuan Fine Arts School in 1984, which provided one- to two-year oil painting training courses for local inhabitants. The school educated more than 6,000 students, many of whom relocated to cities across China after graduation to develop their professional careers, forming what is now known as "Tunchang style".


With the migration of villagers and the rise to prominence of Tunchang oil paintings, in 2011, the county's government established an oil painting street, about 10 kilometers away from Xianliu village.


Built to be the "production workshop" of Tunchang oil painting, the street is lined with 24 oil painting studios. Visitors who enter one will find its walls covered with different types of oil paintings — classical and modern, figures and landscapes. The paintings are sold at home and abroad.


Painters have been attracted to set up shops here by preferential policies, such as low rent for commercial real estate. There are now a total of 48 studios on the street, most run in the form of family workshops. They employ 110 painters, many of whom graduated from the Tunchang Yanpuxuan Fine Arts School.


Zheng Hui, 33, came back to Tunchang and opened a studio on the oil painting street in 2015. "I feel less stressed working in my hometown, partly because of the local government's favorable financial support policies," she says.


Last year, 11 instructors from the oil painting committee of the Hainan Artists Association came to Tunchang's oil painting street to train more than 40 painters and primary and middle school art teachers in sketching. The technical education included teaching students to brighten up works through the application of colors and to select painting elements with a specific effect in mind.


Zheng participated in the event, sketching landscapes and figures under the guidance of the instructors.


"I feel that my creativity has been improved. I'm making art with Li and Miao ethnic cultural themes, as well as marine and tropical characteristics," she says. "I hope my paintings will have the opportunity to be featured in an exhibition."


In the next three years, the oil painting committee will also continue to provide instruction to Tunchang's oil painters, as well as invite Tunchang painters to showcase their work at exhibitions in Hainan's major cities, including Haikou and Sanya.


The fine arts school stopped enrolling students in 2018, and eventually closed in 2020.


Chen Chuantao, 48, son of the school's founder, started the Liuhe Painting Society in April of last year to teach children in the village oil painting for free, along with other volunteers.


He believes that the core of Tunchang's oil painting industry development lies in fostering talent. Twice a week, his organization provides oil painting lessons to a class of children from Xianliu Village Primary School. Most of these children's parents are migrant workers who left the village to work in big cities.


Chen Yating, a second grade student in the village, took classes with the Liuhe Painting Society. She thinks that oil painting is an emotional outlet and helps her better sense the beauty of life. "I can quickly observe and spot good things around me, and record them with my brush," she says. "I think my hand-eye coordination has been improved too."


Chen Chuantao says: "Oil painting can plant the seed of art in the hearts of children. They not only can cultivate a hobby, but also learn a skill for future employment.


"I also hope that this will contribute to passing down Xianliu village's oil painting culture."


Wu Jinxiu, a volunteer painter-teacher in her 40s, says that, in the beginning, she was "worried that the children would be reluctant to take oil painting classes". "I didn't expect them to show such great interest," Wu adds.


She plans to take the children out into the countryside and have them paint in a natural setting, improving their observation ability and painting skills.


Meanwhile, Tunchang county authorities are increasing art instruction in primary and junior middle schools. The county regularly holds oil painting competitions for students and arranges for local painters to give lectures, creating a favorable atmosphere for the cultivation of oil painting. Some schools with more educational resources have set up their own professional art courses, teaching photography, comic illustration and computer-aided design.


"Most of the children who learn painting do it as a hobby," says Chen Yejie, a volunteer painter-teacher in his 30s.


He believes, though, that such education will have a subtle but powerful impact. "We hope to create an artistic atmosphere in the village and cultivate a group of talented children who will become creative high-end professional painters in the future," he says.


▲ Volunteer teachers from the Liuhe Painting Society in Xianliu village give oil painting lessons twice a week to a class of children from the village's primary school. LI TIANPING/FOR CHINA DAILY


▲ Volunteer teachers from the Liuhe Painting Society in Xianliu village give oil painting lessons twice a week to a class of children from the village's primary school. LI TIANPING/FOR CHINA DAILY


▲ An aerial view of Xianliu village, known as the hometown of oil painting in Hainan province. CHINA DAILY


Reporter: Chen Bowen


  推 荐 阅 读  




相关阅读

  • Worries persist after US bank implosions

  • The Federal Reserve's meeting next week will be closely watched in light of recent bank failures in the United States, as the central bank is still trying to ge
  • 每年都上当,当当不一样?

  • 3·15·15消费者权益日又到了一年一度“打假日” “3·15”晚会年年有但是“山寨货”每年也绝不缺席地在考验着我们的智商今天法报君带你盘点那些年买过的 “山寨食品”兔年
  • 白小T创始人张勇:新基建长出新品牌

  • 3月21日-3月23日,第七届·灵眸大赏Morketing Summit将于中国·上海举办。第七届「Morketing Summit灵眸大赏」,将围绕主题“穿透PENETRATE”展开,连续3天,分场高达13个,Morketing
  • 河南这些地方上榜,有你家乡吗?

  • 近日,农业农村部发布通知,经各省(自治区、直辖市)农业农村部门遴选推荐、专家审核和网上公示,决定认定北京市平谷区东高村镇崔家庄村等395个村镇为第十二批全国“一村一品”示范
  • 守护“养老钱”,这些知识要掌握

  • 近年来一些不法分子利用老年人信息闭塞、渴望健康、认知较弱等特点骗取老年人钱财,给老年人造成了严重的财产损失和精神伤害,存在重大风险隐患。下面这份风险提示,请您及时查收
  • 这些话,今天必须说!

  • ​又是一年“3·15”国际消费者权益日‍我们想说的,都在图里了⬇️​​​​​​​​​来源 | 新华网编辑 | 张永琼 郭婷婷(实习)校对 | 赵泽琴 夏鸿审稿 | 秦慧英更多新闻

热门文章

  • “复活”半年后 京东拍拍二手杀入公益事业

  • 京东拍拍二手“复活”半年后,杀入公益事业,试图让企业捐的赠品、家庭闲置品变成实实在在的“爱心”。 把“闲置品”变爱心 6月12日,“益心一益·守护梦想每一步”2018年四

最新文章

  • Youth | Town portrait

  • A stone tablet stands at the entrance of Xianliu village, on which is written: "Xianliu village, hometown of oil painting". The village, in Tunchang county, Sou
  • 进度条更新!西安东站最新建设进展来了

  • 3月13日西安东站新建西康便线工程施工现场几十台挖掘机、渣土车、压路机等工程机械在各个作业面上开展挖方、运土、填方等路基项目施工为新建西康便线打通道路当日下午西康