• Han Dong / Comments / Let Us Dream in The Light of Day / Extracted from Gao Ming Lu
Let Us Dream in The Light of Day / Extracted from Gao Ming Lu

      Han Dong’s works stylizes in homochromous and elegant tones, almost flat spaces and details. The main theme of expressing what the artist thinks about life is being the use of female characters. In Han Dong’s works, woman looks not so feminine but symbolic. In other words, woman has become a carrier of certain abstract meaning. In his works of the 90s, textures are slightly rough. With plain background, people tend to be stiff and their gestures are extremely simple. The picture always appears simple, unsophisticated and heavy, thus constructs his personal style. If the details of the 90s’ works depend on the whole composition and lonely images caused after spreading a figure group’s easy shape, the figures depart from solitude since year 2000. Although the figures haven’t been concentrated on a focus, the background, people’s posture, face look and tone have all changed. The classic keynote is still strictly maintained. That invariable female group seems to carry more vitality compared with that of 1990s as if they were goddess stepping into the world from easel. Suddenly endowed with a few common customs, there is no emptiness and melancholy of 1990s between women’s facial features. Although it adds a layer of soft and transparent mist during this period, the whole image takes in more breath of life. In Han Dong’s latest series "Bird", the tone of the painting is simpler than before and the background has nothing but a monochromatic hue. Here the women figures have been reduced from a few to only one, who maintains an extreme classical elegance. The whole piece has turned into almost purely classical. Unlike the previous works, the content barely touches contemporary; for example, "Deer and Girl"(2005). However, the four paintings are constantly repeating the same motion. The composition guides the audience eyes to the postures of girl and crane. In such repetitions, a subtle act breaks the balance of the whole painting. The posture of the girl grasping the crane is, on the one hand, very elegant but on the other hand, dissolves all the classical elegance that has been painstakingly built up. Moreover, there is no typically stylized expression in the girl’s eyes, yet it flexibly conveys a certain emotion. Will the whole tranquil classic, just like the title "Fading Bird", in this fleeting post-modern society, be fading away or desperately struggling like the crane?

Translated by Fan Chen