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钟泗滨

Cheong Soo Pieng

1917-1983

钟泗滨

Cheong Soo Pieng

1917-1983

Cheong Soo Pieng (1917-1983), a Chinese diaspora artist from Fujian, is one of Southeast Asia’s most well-known artists. He was a never-say-die artist who was continuously experimenting with new artistic compositions and materials, resulting in both inventive abstract patterns and compassionate representations of Balinese figures. Along with artists like Chen Wen Hsi, Liu Kang, and Georgette Chen, he was a pioneer of the Nanyang Style.
Cheong used graphic outlines and mellow tones to elevate tropical daily life in Southeast Asia, combining the sensibilities of Chinese ink and Western oil painting. His unusual paintings of doe-eyed feminine figures with elongated limbs and simple outlines reminiscent of wayang kulit puppets were inspired by a trip to Bali in 1952. He explored space and form by digging deeper into sculptures and assemblages, displaying his mastery across mediums while pushing the frontiers of abstract art.

Cheong used graphic outlines and mellow tones to elevate tropical daily life in Southeast Asia, combining the sensibilities of Chinese ink and Western oil painting.

Cheong used graphic outlines and mellow tones to elevate tropical daily life in Southeast Asia, combining the sensibilities of Chinese ink and Western oil painting.

Cheong graduated from the Xiamen Academy of Fine Arts in 1946 and came to Singapore. In addition to Southeast Asia, his early 1960s trips to Europe inspired him to use modern materials and techniques on both Asian and Western topics. Cheong drew a plethora of ink sketches inspired by nature and sceneries during his two-year stay in London and Europe from 1961 to 1963.His abstract oil paintings, which eloquently portray his nostalgia for the great expanses of the West, incorporate the rich textures of these sketches.

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