Drawing Breath

Q3 Arts and Humanities
Roland Buckingham-Hsiao
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This project describes and discusses the performance piece Drawing Breath (2022), which combined ethnographic research into traditional Chinese calligraphy with experimental art practices to produce a drawn visualization of breathing. It first identifies the ways in which breathing is related to the practice and appreciation of Chinese calligraphy, then discusses other aspects of traditional Chinese writing practice relevant to issues of movement and embodiment. Notions of qi (‘breath’ or ‘energy’) and its associated meditative and physical practices are related to calligraphic mark-making, and Chinese aesthetic theories regarding ‘force’ and ‘form’ are presented in the context of Daoist ontological models of immanence, polarity and interdependent opposites. The paper concludes by reflecting on issues of cross-cultural artistic interaction and cultural appropriation, arguing that contemporary western drawing practice, especially that exploring notions of movement, embodiment and performance, benefits greatly from engaging with non-western practices and ontologies.
画的呼吸
本项目描述并讨论了表演作品《吸气》(2022),该作品将中国传统书法的民族志研究与实验艺术实践相结合,产生了呼吸的绘画可视化。它首先确定了呼吸与中国书法练习和欣赏的关系,然后讨论了与运动和体现问题相关的中国传统写作实践的其他方面。气(“呼吸”或“能量”)的概念及其相关的冥想和物理实践与书法标记有关,中国关于“力”和“形”的美学理论是在道家内在、极性和相互依赖的对立面的本体论模型的背景下呈现的。文章最后反思了跨文化艺术互动和文化挪用的问题,认为当代西方绘画实践,特别是对运动、体现和表演概念的探索,从与非西方实践和本体论的接触中受益匪浅。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Drawing: Research, Theory, Practice
Drawing: Research, Theory, Practice Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
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