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Born
in Chendu, Sichuan in 1942, He Neng showed his artistic promise early
on. He attended the high school affiliated with the Sichuan Academy of
Fine
Arts and then the Academy itself, specializing in traditional
painting. Upon graduation in 1965, he was assigned to
Kunming where he had a succession of jobs producing the political images
demanded during the turbulent years of the Cultural Revolution. He
served first as art editor for the Yunnan News Agency, then as set
designer for the Yunnan Opera Company and subsequently in the Yunnan
Film Studio. He also illustrated books.
The seminal collaboration among He Neng, Jiang and Liu Shaohui
that formed the Yunnan School style occurred in 1979 when they worked on
paintings of Yunnan scenes for a documentary film. He Neng's printings
won him a first prize for illustration, and by 1980 he was transferred
to the Yunnan
Artists
Association. In 1981 he was invited to join the faculty of the Yunnan
Art Institute where he is now a professor. In that same year, he was
part of the controversial "Ten Yunnan
Artists" exhibition in
Beijing's National Art Gallery. In 1982 he triumphantly participated in
the acclaimed "Heavy Color" exhibitions in Hong Kong and Singapore,
which resulted in recognition of the "Yunnan
School." He Neng subsequently showed in
Europe, Japan and the United States, traveling to California as a
visiting artist in1987.
Using the renaissance of the Chinese rich color technique that
is the hallmark of the Yunnan School, He Neng's visions draw upon
china's mythic past. He features images of the cosmic archer (in a style
related to Han hunting scenes); the divine long-waisted beauties from
the Dunhuang cave paintings who fly the heavens; and the Chinese Adam'
as herd boy flutist, wearing hill tribe motifs. He retells tribal myths
using water and gourd patterns that appear abstract, as seen in
Prayer.
He Neng says, "I let the brush strokes follow the fluctuation
of my thought and emotion; my result is unexpected. I strain to
emancipate myself from the confines of the tangible world -- I struggle
and am never satisfied."
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