Posts Tagged ‘Collage’

Li Songsong Biography and His Art Work

January 2nd, 2010

Li Songsong was born on 1973 in Beijing, China. He lives and works in Beijing, China. His painting was the kind of iron candy boxes he played with when he was small. Its title was “Beijing Candy. ” There was another one called “Digging,” which depicted some soldiers digging trenches. He painted above two paintings between 1997 and 1999. At that time, he just graduated from college and had not much to do at home so he painted those. This way of thinking was not especially active back then.

He made “Horse” in June 2001. He started to paint these paintings during that summer when he found some old photographs. Originally he wanted to paint something that had a certain distance from reality. He thought to construct a scene in painting, representing things or a certain sentiment from our real life, was not so interesting.

Li Songsong deliberately plays down the potential implication of the images he chooses for his pictures eliminating his personal feelings from these images by adopting an arms length procedure for his work. He breaks up his found images into segments and loosely regroups them through various shades and blocks of color in his painting. For National Geographic, Li downloaded more than a hundred small photographs of details of Taiwan Island from “Google Earth”, a satellite imagery-based mapping website, and reconstructed a collage of Taiwan by depicting each portion in thick and bold strokes of paint.

The painting of the soldiers digging the trench, for example, was a picture he saw by chance. He felt attracted to the process of looking at photographs. When he looks at pictures in a book, he usually turns them over when we understand the meaning in them. He painted this picture probably because He looked at it so closely. It was a very plain photograph: some people in uniform were digging into the earth on a wasteland. After he read the explanation, he realized that the people were voluntary soldiers digging a trench during the Korean War. If you look at an image long enough, you will discover other meanings in it. He had also painted images from TV, the portrait of the late Deng XiaoPing for example. At the time when he passed his portrait was on TV every day. I took a picture of his portrait and painted it. But he didn’t continue with this kind of topics, including the one of the candy box. Perhaps he wanted to paint some existing and ready-made things at that time. But he didn’t want to sketch a person in a conventional type of space. He wanted the original image to be something one dimensional.

Conclusions:

Li Songsong had already established his own style and the impact of the work had won him a strong reputation in Chinese art circles.

What to Do Next. . .

If you want any information about Li Songsong or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/li_songsong. htm

Promote Eco-Friendly Printing in Your Art Gallery

December 25th, 2009

Ways to Promote an Environmental Campaign with Your Art Products With an art gallery, you have the perfect excuse to promote or voice out any topic or issue. Fighting for a cause such as environmental campaign can be one way to show concern for your community that can very well be promoted through art and print pieces. By planning a full environmental campaign, you can create green concepts with art. Also, by fully furnishing your gallery, you can gain supporters for your cause that can be beneficial for your business. 1. Green Concepts: You can have a display of art pieces on green concepts for your campaign. One way is to create art pieces that revolve around nature like landscape or mountain concepts. This can help set the ambiance for an environmental campaign. 2. Green Tips and Advice in Canvas: With your art pieces, you can relay environmental messages to your visitors such as recycling, global warming issues, and non-biodegradable concerns. With printing options found online, you can print photos on canvas with printers like UPrinting. 3. Eco-Friendly Print Materials: You can create an art piece by building a collage from green printing products. Through this concept, you get to promote eco-friendliness by using recycled materials. 4. Main Display: To fully promote your campaign, you can use window clings for the main campaign caption. You can use this concept as a come-on by having graphics that promote green living or an art piece that resembles such movement. This can attract and inform passersby about what the whole concept of your campaign is. Hosting a party that is fully-themed for an environmental campaign gives a stronger impact to your guests. Also, for your business, this concept can be a good pr stint and can gain you a new set of clientele as well.

Collage and underground art galleries online

December 18th, 2009

There has been a rapidly growing number of online collage art and underground art  galleries over the last five to ten years. The emergence of blogging networks, such as Blogspot, WordPress, and such others, have had  a massive contribution to this fact, and have made it easier to create even the most basic looking site with the ability to add regular entries and the ability to integrate images. These sites can look reasonably good, certainly better than the hacked together sites of the bad old days of the late nineties provided by Tripod, Geocities, and Angelfire (remember those?) One can also not ignore the rise of social networking sites such as the ubiquitous Facebook, and the less popular, but more customizable MySpace. The benefits for the unknown artist, and especially the often ignored and sometimes maligned collage artist, are most obvious, you don’t have to know much in the way of web languages to have an online gallery up and running and let people see your work. It is this fact that is the revolutionary aspect. The ability to set up your own online gallery that anybody in the world with connection to the internet can see (provided Google can let people find it!) This is especially important to the collage and underground artist, who are so often shut out of galleries for their work being unsafe, or not meeting criteria, or there being just too many other artists out there. Well we have now created exhibition space for ourselves, and have  widened our reach, we are now truly independent of the gallery system, and can through the likes of eBay and PayPal or merchandise manufacturers such as Zazzle and CafePress, we can even sell our work.