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« Warmer than a wild animal | Main | Dancing a Sea Turtle Thesis »

That ain't really mist, is it?

Category: Artists & ArtFrivolityPhotography
Posted on: November 12, 2008 12:00 PM, by Jessica Palmer

liuweilandscape.jpg
It Looks Like a Landscape
Liu Wei, 2004 digital B/W photography

Liu Wei's "landscape" is an homage to traditional black and white Chinese brush paintings - created by digitally collaging photos of nude bodies. It's a surprisingly beautiful scene composed of parts we usually consider unbeautiful, including buttocks, knees, and body hair.

Unless you're familiar with Chinese brush painting, you may not think these look much like mountains at all. But the rounded, doubled forms of thighs and buttocks are very similar to the mountain shapes depicted in Song dynasty paintings, like this one, by Guo Xi.

earlyspring1.jpg

Early Spring
Guo Xi (ca. 1020-1090) dated 1072
ink on silk

More by Guo Xi and his contemporaries here.

It Looks Like a Landscape is included in an exhibition of contemporary Chinese art running at the Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) through Jan 4, 2009). Also included: a full-body landscape "tattoo" (really body paint) by Huang Yan. Tattoo #2 is another case of traditional Chinese art reimagined, with the human body as a canvas:

huang1.jpg
Chinese Landscape: Tattoo #2
Huang Yan, 1999
bodypaint; color photography

For those of you who, like me, can't drop by BAM/PFA, check out this friendly gallery page which features dozens of digital photos of the art for web visitors (thank you, BAM/PFA!)

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Comments

1

Hi Jessica, I just discovered your blog via a comment of yours on Erratic Phenomena. Great stuff here! I've bookmarked it. Thanks for exploring a line of thought that interests me very much.

Posted by: Curious Art | November 12, 2008 4:28 PM

2

This is really interesting. I particularly like how you twice used the word "buttocks", as if we are part of some medical school anatomy class that requires formal references to otherwise hilarious parts of the body (ie butts).

Posted by: John Ohab | November 12, 2008 7:54 PM

3

On the subject of tattoo art, I trust you're familiar with Skin, the short story by Roald Dahl. I wasn't impressed with most of Dahl's short stories for adults, but I liked Skin very much.

Posted by: Adrian Morgan | November 12, 2008 8:06 PM

4

Thanks for posting that interesting image! It definitely takes the body as landscape concept a step further than I usually see it. Here (http://tracyduran.net/mfa.html) are some other great images by an artist (Tracy Duran) who's delving into this concept in a more Georgia O'Keeffe way than Liu Wei.

Posted by: Michelle Reinke | November 12, 2008 8:21 PM

5

John, I used the word "buttocks" specifically because I know YOU would object. Ha ha ha, so there.

Also I just kinda like the word. "Derriere" is pretentious, gluteus maximus is too medical, "booty" is too sexual, "butt" looks juvenile, etc. "Buttocks" conveys just the right connotation of meaty, substantial behind area. But really, I should never have been led into this discussion.

Posted by: Jessica Palmer | November 12, 2008 8:41 PM

6

I figured that much. "Buttocks" makes me far more uncomfortable than "butt". "Butts" is good one. It strikes a balance between informative and humorous. Why not "sits bones"? That's what my yoga instructor says. It makes absolutely no sense yet still makes me rather uncomfortable.

Posted by: John Ohab | November 12, 2008 8:51 PM

7

Eh, a little more mist would have been to my liking.

Posted by: beb | November 13, 2008 4:43 PM

8

Beb: I laughed out loud when I read your comment. Funniest thing you've ever said...that I know of.

Posted by: John Ohab | November 13, 2008 7:44 PM

9

Well, the "mist" I was referring to was actually the, um, posterior hair on the top right "mountain". I don't want any more of that kind of mist.

Posted by: Jessica Palmer | November 13, 2008 8:28 PM

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