In Search
of the Bodhi Tree: Paintings by Shi Song
24 March to 27 June 2010
The Centre
of Buddhist Studies and the University Museum
and Art Gallery of The University of Hong
Kong will jointly present the first exhibition
in Hong Kong of paintings by Shi Song.
Shi Song
is recognised in Taiwan for his Buddhist-inspired
artworks. Born in Shanghai in 1947, Shi
trained as an artist in Paris at the Ecole
Nationale Superieure des Beaux Arts. He
first worked as an editor when he returned
to Taiwan but turned to Buddhism when his
mother fell ill in the 1980s, seeking solace
in the making of line drawings of the bodhisattva
of compassion, Avalokitesvara or Guanyin.
Following his mother's death, he continued
this practice and deepened his engagement
with Buddhism as a religion.
Inspired
by his study of Buddhist sutras Shi began
working on a series of oil paintings depicting
episodes in the life of the historical Buddha,
Sakyamuni. Painted in a photorealist style,
they feature Buddha in a forest setting
bathed in a beatific light.
The exhibition
features seventy works representing different
aspects of Shi's work on Buddhist themes:
the oil paintings of the Buddha's life;
line drawings of Guanyin; watercolours;
still lifes as well woodblock prints.
Two talks
associated will take place during the exhibition
period. Both are free and open to the public.
1) The artist
Shi Song, "Countenance of Serene Composure
- Paintings of the Bodhisattva" (in
Putonghua) on Wednesday 24 March at 7:00
pm at the Wang Gungwu Lecture Hall, HKU.
2) Museum
Director YEUNG Chun-tong, "The Bodhisattva
Guanyin in Chinese culture" (in Cantonese)
on Saturday 17 April at 3:00 pm at the Museum.