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Fang Zhaoling (Chinese: 方召麐, 17 January 1914 – 20 February 2006), also known as Lydia Fong, was a Chinese painter and calligrapher.

Fang Zhaoling
Statue of Fang Zhaoling in the Hong Kong University Museum
Born(1914-01-14)14 January 1914
Wuxi, China
Died20 February 2006(2006-02-20) (aged 92)
Hong Kong
NationalityChinese
EducationUniversity of Hong Kong, Oxford University
Known forPainting, Calligraphy
Spouse(s)
Fang Shin-hau
(m. 19381950)
, his death

Biography


Born to a prominent industrialist and scholarly family in the city of Wuxi, Jiangsu Province, Fang Zhaoling was a precocious child with strong interests in Chinese calligraphy.[1] She received classical education at home with tutors and a solid modern education at elite Western-style schools, attaining a sound education in both Chinese and European terms that enabled her to cross cultural boundaries with comparative ease.[2] She was the mother of Hong Kong politician Anson Chan.

Fang lost her father when she was very young. With the support of her mother Fang began studying calligraphy and painting and in her teens, she was sent to the United Kingdom to pursue her studies.[3] In 1937, she enrolled at University of Manchester in Britain to study European history and worked as interpreter and assistant for General Fang Zhenwu (Fang Shuping, 1885-1941), who was then traveling in Europe, North America and elsewhere to raise support for China's fight against Japan.[4] She studied under great artists like Qian Songyan (1899-1985)[2] and Chen Jiucun (1898-1975),[2] Chao Shao-an[5] and Chang Dai-chien and attended both the University of Hong Kong and the University of Oxford.[6]

Fang Zhaoling's experiences of hardship and danger during the 1940s were formative in her views of life and art, as the artist increasingly expressed in the inscriptions on her paintings the urgent desire for peace and prosperity of the world. Following the death of her husband, she took over the family's export-import business to raise her eight children and embarked on her fifty-year career as an artist.[7]

Fang Zhaoling's paintings embody an attempt to locate opportunities for change within the tradition sometimes looking toward the West, but without losing sight of the norms of traditional Chinese ink painting, and paying close attention to brush-and-ink painting techniques. Alluding to both Chinese calligraphy and abstract expressionism, Fang used splashy ink washes alongside gestural brushwork.[8] Fang also added texture to rocky surfaces in her work by scrunching paper into balls and dabbing them in ink, which she used often in her work through the 1980s and beyond.[9] She took part in a considerable number of international exhibitions, and was inspired by her extensive travels in Japan, America, Europe and Asia in the second half of the twentieth century. She returned to China (Shanghai, Beijing, Nanjing and Hefei) more frequently in the 1970s.[10]

Fang continued to work throughout her 80s, and in 1996 received an honorary Doctor of Letters from the University of Hong Kong.[11] She held her first solo show at the Fung Ping Shan Library in 1955, University of Hong Kong. The artist later donated a considerable number of her art works to the University of Hong Kong.[12] In 2005, Fang donated 42 of her paintings to the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. These are housed alongside a joint piece that she painted with Zhang Daqian.[13]


Personal life


Fang knew Fang Shin-hau (方心誥; 1913 – 1950), the son of well-known anti-Japanese general Fang Zhenwu, when she was studying in the UK and married him in 1938. She bore him eight children. Fang escaped with her family to Guilin, Tianjin and Shanghai in China due to war and resettled in Hong Kong in 1948. She was widowed in 1950. Her eight children were:


Current exhibitions



Past exhibitions


2018

2017

2016

2014

2013

2012

2008

2006

2005

2001

2000

1999

1998

1997

1994  

1988

1987

1986  

1985

1984

1983

1982

1981

1978  

1977  

1975    

1974    

1973    

1972  

1971  

1968    

1967  

1962  

1961

1960

1957-8

1956

1955

1953-4

1951

1933


Awards


In 2003, Fang was awarded the Bronze Bauhinia Star for her accomplishments in Chinese ink painting and calligraphy.[15]


References


  1. "Alisan Fine Arts". www.alisan.com.hk. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  2. Julia F. Andrews and Kuiyi Shen (2017). Painting Her Way: The Ink Art of Fang Zhaoling. Hong Kong: Asia Society. p. 17. ISBN 978-988-12272-9-4.
  3. "Chinese painter Fang Zhaoling dies". CBC News. 21 February 2006. Retrieved 28 August 2010.
  4. Julia F. Andrews and Kuiyi Shen (2017). Painting Her Way: The Ink Art of Fang Zhaoling. Hong Kong: Asia Society. p. 19. ISBN 978-988-12272-9-4.
  5. Hong Kong Artists: The Early Generation. Hong Kong: Hong Kong Urban Council. 1978. p. 30. ISBN 9622150071.
  6. "Hongkong Artist Feted In America". South China Morning Post. 18 August 1960.
  7. Julia F. Andrews and Kuiyi Shen. Painting Her Way: The Ink Art of Fang Zhaoling. Hong Kong: Asia Society. p. 21. ISBN 978-988-12272-9-4.
  8. Clarke, David (1996). Art & Place: Essays on Art From a Hong Kong Perspective. Hong Kong University Press. ISBN 9622094155.
  9. Dembina, Andrew (4 October 2017). "Ink Art of Fang Zhaoling - Prestige Online - Society's Luxury Authority". Prestige Online. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  10. Tradition to contemporary: ink painting and artistic development in the 20th-century China. Hong Kong: University Museum and Art Gallery, The University of Hong Kong. 2018. ISBN 978-988-19025-5-9.
  11. "Honorary Graduates". The University of Hong Kong. Retrieved 12 March 2018.
  12. Tradition to contemporary: ink painting and artistic development in 20th-century China. Hong Kong: University Museum and Art Gallery, The University of Hong Kong. 2018. ISBN 978-988-19025-5-9.
  13. "Anson Chan's mother dies aged 92". South China Morning Post. 21 February 2006.
  14. "Exhibitions - Alisan Fine Arts". www.alisan.com.hk. Retrieved 2019-03-29.
  15. Benitez, Mary Ann (1 July 2003). "Controversy as honours body says no one earned top award". South China Morning Post.

На других языках


[de] Fang Zhaoling

Fang Zhaoling (chinesisch .mw-parser-output .Hani{font-size:110%}方召麐; * 17. Januar 1914 in Wuxi, Jiangsu; † 20. Februar 2006) war eine chinesische Malerin.
- [en] Fang Zhaoling



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