A few months ago, I was given a Hasselblad 503CW medium format camera by my late father-in-law. He was a keen photographer and this camera was his pride and joy. So it is very meaningful for me to have this beautiful and iconic camera. I have recently started to explore incorporating photography into my practice, hence I decided to attend a one day workshop in Bristol to learn how to use this camera properly to make the most of it.
EXPERIENCE
This is the Hasselblad 503CW film camera:
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The workshop started with some indoor still life work in the studio.
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The camera has a default waist level view finder. It also came with an eye view finder and I experimented with both. I was very interested in the waist level view finding approach as it’s unique to this type of cameras.
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Learning to load the film was very important because I have not loaded a film for decades since I started using digital cameras.
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The afternoon started with a walk about in the nearby area to take some outdoor streetscape photos. The studio was in the backstreet of an industrial area. The kind of ‘forgotten’ streetscape that really appeals to me. I took 12 photos (the film was a 120 with 12 exposures per film). Below are a few photos and a video showing all 12 that I compiled paired with a soundtrack ‘London calling’ by The Clash that particularly resonates with me at the moment with what’s going on in the world.
The first shot was an abandoned sofa. The studio is based in a warehouse that was previously a large furniture shop/warehouse and I have been there many years ago looking for a low cost sofa when my husband and I were young. So I was excited to see this sofa and I had to take a shot. Was it a left over from the warehouse or just coincidence that it’s there? Was someone trying to make a home there?
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Graffiti on a door. Graffiti is such a large part of the Bristol street culture and I have always had a thing about doors, I love doors:
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There are three different types of barb wire in this shot. What kind of world needs three types of barb wire in one place?
I was very happy with the workshop and felt confident to use the camera as a result. It was a great studio run by an enthusiastic couple and there are excellent dark room facilities that I can use in the future for developing and printing photos. I can also print photos onto canvas there which is great.
I loved going around the industrial area in Bristol. It reminded me of my love for industrial heritage landscapes – that was my passion before I started exploring transcultural art. I think it relates to my engineering background. I have lived my life in industry and engineering for 30+ years and my history is equally deeply rooted in industry as it is in my transculturality.
Doing the ‘forgotten’ streetscape photography reminded me of projects that I had done in 2018 when I first started learning to paint. I particularly like and am fascinated by late 19th/early 20th century disused power stations – for me, they are monumental industrial cathedrals. Seeing them or any industrial sites especially power stations make my heart sing.
My 2018 drawings study of Battersea Power station:
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A study of Battersea Power Station (before all the recent year’s’ development). Acrylic on canvas:
Battersea Power Station (2018)
My work in this area was inspired by two German photographers, Bernd and Hilla Becher, of the Düsseldorf photography school. I admire their New Objectivity style:
This book was also very useful to help me in historical insights and locating sites in the UK:
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After reading the book, I visited Lots Road Power Station in Chelsea, London. It was originally built to power the whole of the London Underground and subsequently decommissioned. My on site study drawings:
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My 2018 painting of a partly boarded up frontage of the Lots Road power station:
London Lots Road Power Station (2018)
Through a work trip, I had the chance to visit the Rotweil power station in southern Germany. It powered the gun powder manufacturing locally.
Here is an acrylic painting of a door at Rotweil:
Rotweil Power Station (2018)
This painting was subsequently part of a group exhibition:
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The tanks at Rotweil power station:
Rotweil Power Station (2018)
FURTHER REFLECTIONS
I have been reflecting on what made me reconnect with my ‘forgotten’ industrial landscapes work. I think it’s because:
– Having done several Cheongsam paintings where I have used bright colours to depict food as cultural metaphors and childhood family dinners based on memory, I am right now not feeling in the right state of mind to paint more colourful paintings. They seem frivolous given what’s happening in the world.
– I have been enjoying painting in bright colours – not sure whether I naturally have a preference or I purposely chose bright colours to mask unpleasant childhood memories. Bright colours and humour are great ways to put a certain slant to the story and perhaps it’s my way of taking control of the narrative. However, exercising that control and the way of storytelling take a lot of energy. It can be energising and draining at the same time. Perhaps it’s a form of renewal like a snake shedding its skin.
– However, I have recently been feeling angry and despair with global politics drastically changing our world order and I don’t think I can do cheerfully bright colours right now.
– Perhaps forgotten and industrial streetscapes somehow make me feel secure. There is no pretending – it is what it is, there is nothing to hide. The anti-aesthetic approach really appeals – just like the photos from the Düsseldorf photography school of New Objectivity. I find those images comforting. Bernd and Hilla Becher’s work are described as ‘focusing on precise, methodical documentation of industrial structures, often using a detached and objective approach’.
– Perhaps I am right now looking for detachment and objectivity. I can’t take anymore unsubstantiated claims, confusion and uncertainties – I need facts. The world needs facts.
– I am ranting.
LEARNING
I appear to be at another junction in my practice. This one I hadn’t planned for as I believe it has arisen due to recent world events. I don’t know exactly how or where I want to take my thinking here. I want to somehow incorporate this ‘no frills’ approach with my transcultural work, but how? I definitely want to do more with the film photography and I need to think how to incorporate that into my practice.
I need to discuss this with my tutor.
NEXT STEPS
Continue to think about where to go from here for my practice. Discuss with my tutor.
Do more streetscapes with the Hasselblad camera and think about how to incorporate photography into my practice to expand my visual arts ‘tool kit’.
In my monthly Chinese painting class, we recently learnt to mount work that has been painted on rice paper. This blog documents the step-by-step process so that I can refer to it at a later stage.
Process of mounting Chinese painting onto mount board:
Make the glue – mix four tablespoons of wall paper paste powder to one pint of water in a bowl. Mix to a smooth paste. Leave to one side.
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Use a pencil to mark the mount board leaving 1 to 2 cm border around the four edges of the painting.
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Cut the mount board along the pencil lines. Leave to one side.
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Place a piece of glass (or thick Perspex) on a table. Wipe clean the glass thoroughly and dry. Place the painting on the glass with the ‘good side down’ leaving a 1cm edge of the painting overhanging the glass.
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Spray the painting with water sparingly to wet it slightly.
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Painting sprayed with water:
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Apply the glue using a 3 to 4 inch wide soft hair brush (such as a goat hair brush seen here). Dip brush in glue to pick up plenty of glue paste. Check for loose hair. Start applying glue – every stroke always from the centre. Do the cross ‘+’ from the centre to each of the four sides.
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Then apply glue from the centre diagonally to the four corners like the Union Jack flag. Continue to apply glue from the centre outwards until the whole painting is covered in paste. Make sure the 1cm of painting overhang that is protruding the top edge of the glass is also covered in paste.
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Use paper towel to wipe off excess glue on the glass around the painting.
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Place the mount board centred onto the painting leaving the 1cm overhang of the painting exposed.
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Apply pressure onto the board with a tight fist, repeating the Union Jack pattern starting with the cross then the diagonals. Work outwards from the centre (always this way) until the whole board has been pressed. Run fingers along the four edges to ensure the edges are completely pressed down.
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Fold over the overhang. Press down firmly.
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Confidently and quickly flip the painting away from the glass. Stand so that the flip action is towards (and not away from) the person’s body – this makes the flip action more robust. Clean the glass thoroughly to remove all glue.
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Leave the painting to dry flat for several days (minimum two days). The mounted painting will warp when dried, place clean paper between dried paintings (if mounting more than one) then put heavy weights on top (e.g. several thick books) for one week or more to flatten.
Mounted painting of sparrows Mounted painting of cockerel
In my search and contemplation about ways of painting, I turned to a Chinese artists that I admire – Qi Baishi. His famous saying, ‘Painting must be something between likeness and unlikeness’ inspired me to experiment with different ways to paint my Family Dinner #2. Here is an image of my original painting in oil on Cheongsam shaped canvas:
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METHOD
I started by doing some quick paintings of the individual dishes using Chinese painting materials: Chinese paint brushes, ink and rice paper.
Flower crabPan fried sliced luncheon meat
Here is the overall composition marked out on a long Chinese scroll of rice paper:
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Work in progress:
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Completed painting – Chinese ink on Japanese Moon Palace (rice) paper, 114x46cm.
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I felt the composition was too uniform and too neatly laid out. Hence I attempted another version with further abstraction to explore ‘unlikeness’:
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REFLECTIONS
I enjoy painting in oil very much. I like the feel of the material, the viscosity when undiluted, the way it pushes against my palette knife or brush when painting impasto and then the luminosity when diluted. But painting in oil takes time (for me anyway) and I enjoy taking that time. I also like coming back to ‘play’ with the painting over several days.
Painting in Chinese brush and ink is a much quicker process. I can do several paintings in a day. Something about the materials make me want to paint fast with vigour. So I was pleased to do the Family Dinner explorations here using Chinese painting materials, it helps me to loosen up – both in my brush strokes and in my thinking.
One of the points I took away from my Unit 2 feedback was to paint more, and more. There was a question in the feedback asking if it was necessary to spend time making the Cheongsam canvases; I think that was a good question and perhaps I should spend more time painting and improve on that. Although I want to expand my practice to incorporate 3D, film and photography, I envisage my practice to always be rooted in painting – mainly because I enjoy it and I like the challenge. So I need to paint more to take it to the next level. I don’t know what ‘next level’ means, but I just feel the need to push my current boundaries – wherever that may take me!
I managed to source the following book ‘Likeness and Unlikeness’ abour Qi Baishi’s work:
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I need to do more research about what he really meant by his saying. Perhaps that would give me inspiration and new ideas to explore. I had thought that ‘between likeness and unlikeness’ meant a way towards abstraction. But when I look at his paintings, there was always good likeness (a shrimp looked like a shrimp). So I discussed with my Chinese art tutor what Qi meant – it appeared to be not about abstraction. She believed it was about the artists putting themselves into the work. I need to research this some more to really understand. I will start by reading the book.
I feel excited about the research between likeness and unlikeness…
LEARNING
I want to take my painting to the next level but I have not been able to decide how. The reflections above have helped me. I think I will return to painting on 2D canvas for now while I’m experimenting. I would like to return to 3D canvases such as the Cheongsam dress at some point because I have really enjoyed those paintings.
NEXT STEPS
I want to continue to build on my painting practice in the following way:
– Really explore oil as a material. I am used to using oil undiluted to create thick impasto layers, so I will experiment with thinner layers to give me more ways to express myself. Especially to find ways to create ambiguity, about distant memories.
– Research and understand the meaning of ‘between likeness and unlikeness’, start with experimenting in my Chinese art practices with ink on rice paper. Then maybe transfer the learning and understanding to painting with oil if it feels right.
After making Family Dinner #1 (image below), I proceeded to make #2 with the learning.
Family Dinner #1
METHOD
I was overall satisfied with how the new Cheongsam pattern worked out. But I felt the measurements needed to be more generous if I were to wear the canvas because of the stiffness of the material. If it were too tight then it would be difficult to put on. Hence I modified the pattern to make it wider.
Pattern ready for cutting
I also learnt from the last dress painting that it was difficult to paint the back of the dress if the dress was fully sewn up and placed on the canvas – it was impossible to access the back while the oil on the front was drying for weeks.
Therefore I experimented in this case with not sewing up the sides and draping the dress with the back part of the canvas hanging off the back of the easel. The plan is to paint the front then turn the board to paint the back.
Back of the dress draped over the board
This family dinner has a main dish of ‘flower crab cooked in a clay pot’. So learning from my Chinese painting class – I studied the anatomy first and did a few ink drawings of crabs:
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Then I chose the colour of the background based on another Chinese dinner service. It’s the same pattern of the yellow one I used on Family Dinner #1, but of a turquoise colour:
I experimented with different level of tinting to get the right colour and not too dark:
The composition was developed on my sketchbook then marked out using black willow charcoal on the canvas:
Composition drawings
Then I decided that I would sew up the sides of the dress because I felt it would be too difficult to turn the canvas inside-out to sew once it has been painted with oil. So I reverted back to the process I used previously after much consideration. I also used Velcro much more extensively along the complete opening of the right chest and side instead of using a zip or buttons because it would be hard to sew a zip or hand-sew fasteners due to the thick canvas. Hot glue was used to fix the Velcro in addition to the Velcro tape adhesive to ensure it was firmly in place.
Sides of the dress were sewn up
I started with the ‘pan fried sliced luncheon meat’. I once did a tinting paint chart of the different red oil paints I had. It was very useful to choose the colour of luncheon meat from the chart. I chose the shade according to my childhood memory – the colour of artificially-pink meat is difficult to forget!
Then I proceeded to loosely paint and mark out the rest of the composition.
Adding chicken and green beansAdding clay pot flower crab and Campbell’s
Then more detail painting of the luncheon meat with some yellow edges for the oil used for pan frying:
Adding details to the whole salt baked chicken:
Around this time I received my Unit 2 feedback from my tutor with comments that made me reflect on how I apply the oil paint. So I experimented with some looser strokes on the crab shell.
The painting was finished by completing the Campbell’s alphabet soup and adding pattern details from the dinner service around the dishes. Pink satin fastening frogs were added as finishing touch.
Finished work – Family Dinner #2:
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REFLECTIONS
I really enjoyed making this painting. Food is such a key part of Chinese and Hong Kong culture that appreciating food is deep in my DNA. The more I paint these dinners, the more I realise that it’s not just the eating that I enjoy, but the painting of food as well. Working from memory has been great, thinking back to all the meals where these dishes were eating – at home as well as at restaurants.
Some of the unhappy experiences from our family dinners that I talked about in the reflections for Family Dinner #1 did not enter my consciousness for some reason. I realised that some of those experiences were dish dependent. Perhaps the dishes depicted here were ‘safe’ dishes without chances to go wrong. Dinner #1 featured a steamed fish – that was always challenging…
Part way through making this painting I received my Unit 2 feedback and it has been very thought-provoking. It made me immediately reevaluate how I applied oil painting – perhaps I have been too ‘one-dimensional’. Always applying the same (fairly thick) way. I tried a looser approach on the crab shell and was happy with the outcome. I have been thinking about that constantly and I need to experiment much more. How to use paint in a way to depict my distant and fading memory?
The Unit 2 feedback also made me think more deeply about why I am painting on Cheongsam dresses. Why dresses? Why Cheongsam and is the time well-spent in making dress-canvases? There is a lot to think about and reflect on from the Unit 2 feedback and I will write a dedicated blog for that.
I was going to make another cheongsam dress painting after this one, but I think I will make this decision after fully reflecting on my Unit 2 feedback.
LEARNING
– Be more flexible and creative in using oil. Try different thick- and thinness to create impact, to tell the story.
– Doing something just because I enjoy it is not enough a reason to do it. Need to consider more deeply about why – I believe I do this and reflect already but perhaps need to go deeper to examine my reasons.
– In terms of the Cheongsam making process, the increased use of Velcro as fasteners was a success and should be used in future dresses. Using hot glue to fix the Velcro was also a good idea.
– Overall, the pattern development has gone well and I believe I have a well tested and suitable method of producing a Cheongsam painting canvas.
NEXT STEPS
– Experiment with thinning oil and layering.
– Explore ways to depict fading memory without being overly detailed.
– Complete and capture my reflections from Unit 2 feedback. Write a dedicated blog for that and determine next steps to develop my practice. What to do if not Cheongsam paintings?
– Finish the back of the Cheongsam when the front is dried.
I have been learning Chinese painting for three years in parallel to my other courses such as the MA Fine Art programme at Central Saint Martins. Collectively, they help me to develop my transcultural art practice.
My latest learning was about the use of seals. Here is some information from the Hong Kong Art Museum about the use of seals on painting and calligraphy:
The seal is applied at the end of the painting process. Since the seal paste is usually a permanent colour of Vermillion (cinnabar red), it cannot be erased hence its placement has to be considered and applied carefully. Otherwise, it could ruin the painting composition.
For Chinese artists, they can use different types of seals. They typically have one or more name-seals and other optional mood-seals. My late mother left behind several of her seals that I have been studying and using for my paintings. I asked my Chinese painting tutor whether it was appropriate for me to use another artist’s (i.e. my mother’s) seals. My tutor said, ‘she was your mum, I don’t think she would mind. Anyway, who is going to check?’ Since my mother was an established painter, her seals were beautifully carved from quality stones. I have enjoyed discovering them and playing with them.
Since my last lesson, I have been practicing signing my name in Chinese calligraphy and then putting two seals on paintings. These experiments have been challenging in a fun way.
1. A vase of flowers in Chinese ink on Xuan (rice) paper. The calligraphy says it is by me (my full name with surname) and there are two seals:
– The seal at the bottom left corner belonged to my mother. It is a mood-seal with the meaning of ‘transcendence’ – a spiritual state of moving beyond physical needs and realities.
– The seal at the top right is my new mood seal that I ordered from Hong Kong through my tutor. It means ‘third space’ and is a fundamental element of my art practice – exploring the ‘third space’ which describes my existence. Third space here is as described by Homi K. Bhabha in his book ‘The Location of Culture’.
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2. A simple painting of a flower branch in a small vase. The calligraphy says it is by me (name only, no surname) with two seals:
– bottom left: my full name seal with surname.
– Top right: ‘Transcendence’.
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3. A small vase with a branch and leaves. My name in calligraphy with two seals:
– Bottom left: my full name.
– Top right: one my of mother’s seals but I do no know what it says! It is of an ancient script and beyond my knowledge. I will keep researching to see if I can find out. I have subsequently found out by seeing on one my mother’s paintings that I have put it upside down!
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4. My cat Tom who is sadly not with us anymore. No calligraphy with two seals:
– My full name and the upside down seal!
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LEARNING
Using the seal properly is an art form that requires skills which comes with experience. The placement of the seal as well as how it is applied are both important. Too much paste would ‘flood’ the carving giving a red mess, too little paste would make part of the seal invisible, i.e. an incomplete image. So it needs to be just right.
The placement is even more challenging. The use of negative space is critical in Chinese painting – my Chinese painting tutor said the extensive use of negative space was a key differentiation between Chinese and ‘Western’ art. Placing the seal after the painting is completed means the seal interrupts the negative space hence it needs to be done in a way that maintains the harmony of the composition whilst enhancing the composition. While writing this I realise it is impossible to articulate how to do it! What I have learnt from the above paintings are that if I am using two seals then place them diagonally on the composition and use one large and one smaller seal, i.e. do not use two seals of the same size. The non-uniformity makes the composition more interesting.
My tutor said the only way to learn was to keep doing it, keep practicing, then eventually it would come naturally. I have to take her words for it as I don’t have any other options! I used to only put seals on paintings that I was happy with, but my tutor said I should do it on every painting in order to practice. So that is what I will do!
NEXT STEPS:
– Keep practicing using seals on all my Chinese paintings.
– Pay more attention to how other Chinese artists use their seals – study my mother’s paintings and my painting books more carefully.
After finishing three other Cheongsam paintings, I started this work with a new Cheongsam canvas design and thicker gauge canvas as described in this blog:
I then explored the possible subjects for this painting and decided to focus on food. In the last two ‘food’ Cheongsam paintings, food was used as a racial identity metaphor. Food in the context of this new painting is about memories of family dinners in the 1970s when I was growing up in Hong Kong. Food was and still is a very important part of the Hong Kong culture. Family dinners are very important and day-to-day life often centres around family dinners. The Hong Kong society is a fusion of many cultures and this is strongly reflected in its food. I want to make a series of paintings to explore my childhood memories and tell my transcultural stories through my family dinners.
METHOD
The idea of making paintings about my family dinners came to me when I visited my sister and she cooked a dish of steamed whole seabass with ginger, spring onions, shiitake mushrooms and coriander in soy sauce. She reminded me this was exactly the same recipe that our late mother used to cook for our family dinners. Seeing the dish and her description triggered many deeply buried memories. I started to remember all the different dishes that my mother use to cook – all those memories that I have long forgotten. I took a photo of my sister’s steamed fish as I wanted to incorporate that into my painting.
As soon as I returned home, I started to research images of dishes that I have had and worked on the composition. Below are some examples created using Adobe Fresco:
Here is a video of the Fresco creation process:
I also used my sketchbook to experiment with different compositions.
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The previous Cheongsam paintings were in acrylic on calico canvas and I wanted to paint in oil for this work because I enjoy painting in oil and I wanted to return to oil after not doing so for some time. Also, I had in mind that the toppings for the fish would be ‘piled up’ and I felt that oil paint would give me more freedom and time to play with getting the right texture. I usually just start painting straight away on the canvas, but on this occasion, something was holding me back and I had the urge to do some study drawings first to give me time to think about the details and composition. Below is the study drawing for the fish dish:
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At the top of this blog, I listed an earlier blog about using a new design for the Cheongsam with thicker canvas material. This latest dress design and material combination caused the waist area to crease on the mannequin. So far, I have painted all the previous Cheongsams on a mannequin. However, for this one, I felt that it needed to be painted flat to eliminate the creases during the painting process. So I moved the canvas from the mannequin to the easel.
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Painting moved to the easel so that I could paint on a flat surface:
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I proceeded to mark out the composition starting with the centre piece – the steamed fish. The placement of the fish dish is reflective of a Chinese family dinner where the steamed fish (if on the menu) would typically be placed in the centre as the signature dish.
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Having roughly marked out the fish dish, I added a plate of steamed baked beans. Since Hong Kong is/was such a fusion of different cultures and heavily influenced by the British due to colonialism, it was not unusual to have imported tinned food served alongside traditional Chinese dishes in my family. In hindsight, it sounds strange and funny to serve these two very different dishes together; but at the time it was the most natural thing – food was just food especially for a child. I never thought about their origins or the reasons that caused these two dishes to came to be served next to each other. I remember my mother calling baked beans ‘pork beans’ at the time and I remember at times there were small pieces of pork fat among the beans. I researched this and found that manufacturers did put pieces of pork in with the beans but removed them due to World War II meat rationing. I am not sure if they reintroduced pork in the 1970s or if what we ate were left over from the old pre-war stock!
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Other dishes were gradually added to the menu, each dish having their individual significance in the role they played in our family dinner. I also enlarged the two fish to give them more prominence and I wanted a tight composition as from memory, dinner tables in Hong Kong were always crowded with food.
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I tried using charcoal with oil which I had never done before and below are photos of the initial experiment on oil-paper:
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The experiment was not satisfactory because the charcoal did not work well on oil-paper, so I returned to experimenting on the canvas:
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I was pleased with the charcoal effect and proceeded to paint the fish:
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Toppings of spring onions, shiitake mushrooms etc. were added in thick layers of oil paint:
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Time to add the dessert – Del Monte fruit cocktail.
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To complete the composition, I added pattern details from the Chinese dinner set that my parents used at the time around the various dishes on the painting.
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The completed front part of the Cheongsam painting:
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The painting was put back onto a mannequin as I wanted the oil paint to cure according to the shape that it would eventually be displayed in. Then green satin ‘frog’ fasteners were added to complete the Cheongsam look.
Below are images of the finished front half of the painting with –
-Steamed whole fish with spring onions, ginger, coriander and sliced shiitake mushrooms in soy sauce;
-Braised pork belly with preserved mustard greens;
-Gai Lan (greens) with oyster sauce;
-Steamed baked beans (imported) and
-Del Monte fruit cocktail (imported).
‘Family dinner #1‘, oil and charcoal on 240gsm cotton canvas. Size: 98 x 68 x 28cm.
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REFLECTIONS
So many thoughts and memories went through my mind while making this painting, it is hard to know where to start for my reflections. Like I have done before, I will use ‘free writing’ to capture them as they come into my consciousness as I write.
– Only in hindsight when I am doing this painting did I realise what a strange fusion of cuisine we experienced growing up in Hong Kong. Not only because imported tinned food like ‘pork beans’ (now known as baked beans) were served alongside carefully prepared Cantonese dishes, but the fact that the beans were steamed in a wok to heat up was rather amusing. Since my mother would not have known how baked beans were meant to be served, so steaming in a wok was her default method. As children, we loved mixing the baked beans with our boiled rice in our bowls because of the sugar and salt in the beans. Like many children all over the world, we (sadly) appreciated the processed food more than the poor mother’s fresh cooking!
– My father was the patriarch. He expected a well cooked meal twice a day (he used to come home for lunch). If the meal was not up to standard then there would be consequences. He was not physically violent but there would be a ‘dark cloud’ over our dinner, eaten in silence with the children exchanging glances but no one dared utter a word. The rejected dishes would be sent back to the kitchen to be remedied if possible (if overcooked then not possible).
– So my mother had to deliver two perfect cooking performances per day, everyday. Chinese cooking can be challenging, to get the taste balance, texture, freshness, aesthetics (just to name a few requirements) correct for every dish is very demanding. Especially when the ‘judge’ had high expectations. For example, for a steamed whole fish, the fish had to be cooked just right, not overcooked or undercooked – this is challenging even for restaurant chefs. If there was steamed fish then as soon as my father sat down at the table, he would split the fish open along the spine bone with his chopsticks and examine the ‘colour’ of the flesh, if there was any hint of pink along the spine ( meaning undercooking) then the chopsticks would be slammed down as a gesture of disapproval, no words needed to be said and the dish would be taken back to be remedied. It is no wonder my mother sometimes used Western tinned food to make up the number of dishes to get by. Since my father worked for the Hong Kong Government and was a life-long civil servant to the ‘Colonial Crown Service’, he was very accepting of Western tinned food because we (the colonised) were led to believe that anything from the West was superior. So in this context, colonialism in fact brought with it some occasional relief for my mother in her job of family meals planning.
– I think I chose a bright yellow background for my Cheongsam dinner because I love food and enjoying good food makes me happy as it is such a key part of my heritage. I always wanted family dinners to be fun, bright and cheerful. Although there were often ‘dark clouds’ that loomed over our family dinners, as kids, we would find reasons to giggle at the dinner table – it was our way of responding to the situation through kids’ humour.
– The background yellow is also similar to one of the dinner sets that my parents had hence I incorporated some of its design onto the dress. I will elaborate about the dinner set design on the back of the dress as it has an interesting history.
– There were other back stories to the dishes on the painting and on how ‘the family dinner’ was often where the dynamics of my parents’ relationship played out. I am reluctant to detail all of them because it would be unfair to my parents who are not around to say whether they wanted their stories to be told. Also, I am not sure if I am ready to express everything yet.
– I wonder, how does one find out if the dead would want their stories told and how does one decide whether to tell them anyway? Also, I can only tell a story through my lens, so whose story would I be telling?
– Recently, I have been thinking a lot about ‘process vs outcome’ in my practice. I have thought more deeply about this since I started to make Cheongsam paintings. I think it is because the work takes longer and involves more complexity, so the extensive creative process gives me time to think more deeply. Especially with this Family Dinner painting – the composition is more complex than the previous ones and painting in oil takes longer which is part of why I love to paint in oil – the process and materiality force me to take my time. The surrendering of agency to the process elates me. My thinking during my making process comes in many forms, such as reflections and memory recalls that I would often incorporate into my painting, or ‘put aside’ in my ideas bank for future paintings. All these thoughts go towards the sense-making of my journey, my identity and the world around me. It is right now at this very moment in time while writing this set of reflections that I have come to truly understand what ‘sense-making’ means – to me. I wish I could bottle this moment before the thought eludes me.
– I wrote in my research paper about two transcultural artists and their sense-making that takes place on the canvas. For the paper, I researched about sense-making and how that process fundamentally supports the human survival. In the context of migration, people displacement or in a transcultural setting, where the environment is new or constantly changing – I believe the opportunity to reflect and make sense of one’s experience is essential to survival in a meaningful way; to feel belonged in the world and not merely to exist. Unfortunately for many, the quest for physical survival can be overwhelming therefore depriving them of the opportunity for the much needed sense-making.
LEARNING
When I first started planning the structure of my blogs at the start of my MA programme, I had planned for the REFLECTIONS section to be free-thinking and free-flowing, capturing whatever came to mind related to the work or during the making process. The LEARNING section is there to bring the thinking back to the context of my practice to extract any practice-related learning and plan the next steps. This structure has helped me to develop my practice so far and is becoming even more important as my reflections become more extensive and ‘free’. So I will now try to extract some learning from the this piece of work and the above reflections.
– Referring to my thoughts on ‘process vs outcome’, there is increasing clarity for me as to why I am not always bothered about the work once it is finished. For me, the work is a way to provide a process – the process is more precious to me. The process gives me quality thinking time and it ‘walks with me’. I enjoy making very much, but it is the making while thinking or reflecting that is the most valuable for me.
– So what am I going to do with this realisation, or confirmation of what is valuable for me in my practice? I don’t know yet, maybe I don’t need to do anything to bring these thoughts to a conclusion, perhaps it is just a beginning with no end – that feels exciting. So I will go with ‘it’ and try not to over think ‘it’.
– I have thought a lot about how I could capture some of the more abstract elements that came out during the making process, perhaps onto a piece of physical work – could be painting, writing, 3D etc.. I remember in a much earlier blog, I talked about wanting to find ways to express my thoughts through abstraction as that might liberate me to express more freely without the confinement of physical preconceptions. A specific image that has been recurring in my mind since finishing the Family Dinner painting was the pink tinge (of blood) that would sometimes be visible along the fish’s spine as my father parted the flesh of an undercooked fish with his chopsticks. For me, that tinge of pink symbolised innocence and trouble at the same time. I need to do something with that pink to get it out of my head.
– As I was making this painting, many memories of other interesting family dishes and stories came to mind and I am bursting to paint more dinners to capture them.
– I also need to complete the back of this dress. I had originally thought about painting a second dinner on the back, but I have decided to not do this because I want to save some of the dishes for other dresses as I want to make a series of several ‘Family Dinner’ paintings. Also, I want to paint the design of the dinner set that my parents had because it has an interesting history.
– As for the new Cheongsam sewing pattern that I used for this painting canvas – I am very pleased with the new design because it does not have any darts so the canvas can be painted flat which means I can use thicker canvases and paint in oil which is my preferred medium for this current series of painting.
– The new Cheongsam canvas design also means I have reduced the making time of the canvas from two days down to around half a day. This improvement was due to a simpler design and my experience gained in making these canvases – I am now more confident in sewing with my machine and quicker in trouble-shooting. This means I have more time for the other parts of the creative process.
– A key learning in making Family Dinner #1 was to take time in my making. I have in the past rushed my work, for no specific reason but to just ‘get things done’. The study drawing of the steamed fish was invaluable for me and gave me the confidence to experiment and take chances when painting on the canvas because of my enhanced observations. I now appreciate why artists make study drawings!
NEXT STEPS
– Paint the back of Family Dinner #1 with the family dinner set design.
– Start to research and make Family Dinner #2.
– Continue to take time in my making, e.g. allow time to make study drawings and appreciate materiality.
– Experiment and play: do some abstract paintings of ‘the pink tinge’ to explore how to capture some of the ‘magic’ that I have felt during my making process.
Since I have decided to do a series of paintings on Cheongsam shaped canvases, I started to look for more efficient ways of making the canvas to give me more painting time. I was asked by my tutor if it was important for me to make the canvas myself or if they could be made by someone else. My response was that I felt I had to make them because that was part of the making process for me. I have become increasingly aware that the process is more important for me than the outcome since the process provides valuable thinking and reflecting time for me.
The photo below shows the design of the Cheongsam canvas that I have been using up to now. It is made of relatively light calico material and the design is easy to make. It is a loose fitting design and I have been putting in darts on the front and back to give a more fitted look in line with modern Cheongsam designs that have been influenced by European designers in the 1960s. This design has worked well as I have been painting simple pop art designs in acrylic and the materials worked well together.
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However, for the next few pieces of work, I wanted to make more complex paintings in oil. So I needed a more robust canvas material and ideally a dress design without having to sew the darts which could be difficult with a thick canvas.
METHOD
I sourced a book from Hong Kong that has a simpler Cheongsam pattern that didn’t involve sewing darts to achieve the traditional fitted look:
I copied the design into my sketchbook and customised the measurements:
The measurements were checked against an existing dress of mine:
Dressmaker’s drawing tools were used to add in the curves and complete the pattern:
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The pattern was pinned to the 240gsm cotton canvas for cutting:
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The dress was sewn according to the instructions:
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A mistake was made when cutting the front hence a part of the seam was showing. Hopefully it would be less obvious once the dress was painted.
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Back view:
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The dress was painted with a vibrant yellow colour – a mixture of gesso and acrylic paint to prime the canvas.
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Due to the stiffness of the fabric, there were areas around the waist where the painted fabric was creasing heavily. That’s not great for painting so would need to find a way to minimise this problem:
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REFLECTIONS
I was very pleased to find the simpler dress pattern especially because that made it easier to use thicker canvases for painting as I wanted to go into painting in oil which is a medium that I preferred.
However, not sewing in darts has caused the fabric to crease heavily around the waist and I needed to find a solution rather than adding darts to such a heavy fabric. Despite this, I was very pleased with the progress of experimenting with a new pattern that would really speed up the process of making the Cheongsam canvas.
LEARNING
I was frustrated by myself in missing out one small step when cutting which led to the seam being shown on the front chest area. Lesson learnt and I have made a clear note in the pattern as a reminder for next time.
NEXT STEPS
Find a solution to minimise the creasing around the waist and start painting!
While I was on holiday in Scotland during summer 2024, I had a dream one night about making a piece of art work with pieces of laddered (torn) stockings or tights. The ladders were ‘repaired’ using nail varnish. Then each piece was framed individually in an ornate thick gold frame. It was such an unusual dream that as soon as I woke up, I captured the dream in my sketchbook in case I forgot the details as I often struggle to remember my dreams.
Mending stockings or tights with nail varnish was a technique that I learnt from my mother when I was little. If I laddered my school tights then she would mend it with her nail varnish. If the tear was small or in an area under my dress then it was fine to repair in this way without having to buy new tights all the time. Otherwise it would have been costly with an active child. In hindsight, it was ridiculous to make small children (girls) wear tights as school uniform, it was most impractical!
When I returned home after the holiday, I decided to realise my dream to make some art by mending a stocking.
METHOD
The first challenge was that tights and stockings nowadays are usually made of ladder-resistant materials which means they don’t ladder!! I had to dig out some old socks in order to find materials that would ladder. After laddering the material, a piece of white card was rolled up and inserted into the sock.
Some tissue was placed behind the ladder then red nail polish was applied at various points to stop further laddering.
This process was repeated with a second piece to create two pieces in total:
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The two pieces were placed on a large piece of white card, in different arrangements, to experiment with composition:
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REFLECTIONS
It was such a strange dream that I could not think of what would have triggered such a memory during a holiday in Scotland. Throughout the planning and making process, I thought about all the things that we learn from our parents. My mother didn’t actively teach me to mend my tights, I just watched her and that technique was cemented in my subconscious.
During the last year when I have been making Chinese Cheongsam dresses as painting canvases, I have been thinking a lot about watching my mother dressmaking when I was little and how much I learnt from her without being conscious of it.
Thinking more about it – a week before I had the dream, I was looking at some old family photographs shown to me by a family member. Many of the photos of my parents that I had not seen for years. Perhaps seeing those images somehow unlocked the memory of mending my school tights. The act of mending tights is uniquely personal and it only happens between mother and daughter because boys do not wear school tights and it’s unlikely that fathers have nail varnish to hand. Also, a mended pair of tights hidden under a dress is a secret between mother and daughter, or between women when such techniques are passed from one to another. Those moments are precious.
It is usually at this point of reflection that I start to feel sad because I left home so young (14) and I must have missed out on so much learning from my mother, or just time with her to enjoy that unique bond, sharing secrets that only we knew about and that united us from the world. As always in life, we don’t appreciate how precious those moments are until much later.
I decided to stop after making two pieces and didn’t realise the whole dream of making multiple pieces into an installation. I may come back to it at a later stage. For now, I feel that this experiment has served its purpose in testing out the process and triggering reflections that will keep me thinking for some time. Overall, I am happy with how this quick experiment went and pleased with some of the images I produced.
LEARNING
I usually make work after lots of thinking and planning. This piece of work came from ‘left field’ (a dream) and the making was quick and experimental. I enjoyed the diversion from my main project and to get some results so quickly was enjoyable. A large painting often takes so long that having some quick work in between can help to feed my need for results as well as interrupt the agony of painting. I recently heard an artist on TV saying that painting has the word ‘pain’ in it – too true!
Also, I have become increasingly aware of the importance of my thinking during making. Before I start making work, I think a lot about how to make it. But during making, the work takes my mind to many places that I have either long forgotten about or didn’t know existed. Hence I am becoming aware of the quality thinking time that ‘happens’ when I am making art. In a recent discussion during one of our MA online sessions, we talked about process vs product. That was very helpful as I feel excited about my discovery of how important the process is for me, much more important than the product. In fact, I am usually not so bothered about the product as it is secondary to the process for me. Perhaps for me, the purpose of the product is merely to provide a process.
NEXT STEPS
– Continue to enjoy the thinking and reflecting time during my making process.
– Do not feel guilty about taking diversions from my main projects; quick diversions like this one has provided invaluable insight from my subconscious. I should value it.