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Twins to the Glory explores man and nature

Gallery honoured to present Zhong

Ren's first Canadian Exhibit

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 By ANITA ZHU

Famous Chinese painter Zhong Ren has 38 pieces on display at the Sunzen Art Gallery.

The pieces can be viewed from Nov. 22 to Feb. 21 in downtown Vancouver. Ren is known for his gonbi paintings. Gonbi is a Chinese painting technique where the artist uses ink, colour, and meticulous brush strokes to create detailed works of art.

“I have admired Ren for almost

20 years,” Dashan Pan, the curator at Sunzen Art Gallery, said. Sunzen Art Gallery was originally established 17 years ago in Qingdao, China. The Vancouver location showcased Ren’s work in its grand opening.

Lu Wang, the director of operations at Sunzen, has worked at the location in Shandong China for years. She helps to communicate with Ren and his studio team.

Wang said that Ren became famous in his early 20s, and “always seeks to challenge himself and break through the challenge, again and again.” whom brushed down the gallery with cedar before we installed the artworks”, Fortney said. This would have prepared the museum space to hold the art, which may harbour negative energy from these notorious schools.

The co-curator, Viahsta Yuan, said that they represent Ren’s paintings as four seasons.

“My job is to basically create an exhibition that could easily communicate to the audience why his work is important,” Yuan said. Yuan said the idea is that when people walk in the gallery, they will feel that they are emerging into another realm with nature, which is totally different from a modern city.

Part of Ren’s fall section was done on silk, using a technique known as taoran. Taoran means “leaving the blank space,” on empty areas as well as the highlighted area on the branches of the bamboo.

“If you see this snow on the leaves, the bamboo as the highlighted part, it all reveals the true color of the silk, instead of using any dye to paint in afterwards,” Yuan said.

One attendee, Julia Harrison, knew of the primary Inkameep Day School in Okanagan, but didn’t know of the other collections from Alert Bay, Vancouver Island and Manitoba. “It was really exciting to see those and to learn how this has been such a community effort in terms of integrating the community voice back into the exhibit," Harrison said. There is Truth Here is on exhibit until Jan.5, 2020.

RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS IN THE LOWER MAINLAND

» St. Paul's North Vancouver, 1899 - 1958

Roman Catholic

» St. Mary's Mission, 1863 - 1985

Roman Catholic

» St. George's Lytton, 1901 - 1979

Anglican

» Coqualeetza Chilliwack, 1861 - 1940

Presbyterian

SOURCE: HTTPS://BCTF.CA/HIDDENHISTORY/EBOOK.PDF

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