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QINGDAO TODAY
在线翻译:
szdaily -> Culture -> 
Artist shows garbage is not rubbish
    2020-07-09  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

“ONE man’s trash is another man’s treasure.” This is a well-known phrase but for Zhao Xiaoli it is also a guide to her professional life. She makes art out of garbage.

A variety of recycled objects, including a wooden door, a chair with one leg missing, an old television, a discarded washboard, a broken guitar, plastic bottles and a vintage thermos flask, have provided a canvas of inspiration for Zhao.

“Art should serve the public, which needs us to think outside the box. Through the form of art, the used items can be redefined,” says the 30-year-old painter.

Zhao’s interest in rubbish is known by many people, even sanitary workers near her studio in Beijing. When anyone in her community throws furniture out, like a door or a chair, Zhao is always the first to know.

In a 30-second video posted in December on her social media Weibo, she recycles a wooden door. After smoothing the surface of the door, she sweeps a brush in an apparently wild style and allows the paint to splatter on the vertical board. Later, her reproduction of American painter Charles Courtney Curran’s “By the Lily Pond” appears on the door, as if by magic. The clip has been viewed over 1 million times on the platform.

For Zhao, it seems that anything can be her canvas. Last year, a coffee store she often visited was closed and the owner gave her a broken guitar. With it she created an oil painting which combined works by two Dutch masters, “Girl With a Pearl Earring” by Johannes Vermeer and “Wheat Field With Cypresses” by Vincent van Gogh.

Last year when someone threw out a chair with one broken leg, Zhao took it. After cleaning it, she emptied a bottle of blue paint onto the surface of the chair and transformed it into Van Gogh’s “The Starry Night.” Zhao wrote on the chair “Loving Vincent. Sadness will last forever.”

With her “magic pen,” a vintage wooden laundry washboard can be the perfect “canvas” for a landscape oil painting. With a full moon on the lake, the rungs have been painted as waves reflecting the moonlight. Many viewers have been amazed by her imagination, saying that “the piece invites people to look at used items differently.” Some joked that “it is the most valuable and beautiful washboard ever seen.”

“Beauty is everywhere. Anything can be changed into a work of art,” Zhao says.

From a family of artists in Xiamen, Fujian Province, Zhao started painting at the age of 15 and realized from that time it would be her career. She graduated with an art major from a university in Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, then became an illustrator and opened a studio in Beijing. She studied painting with Ukrainian painter Mykhailo Guida, who is well-known for his portraits. Art critic and curator Lu Rongzhi is also an important influence for her.

“Painting is the focus of my life, which is my work and dream,” Zhao says. In her words, she is a “painter energized by an engine,” and has few needs or time to go out to socialize.

In May, she went for a week as a volunteer to the Liangshan Yi Autonomous Prefecture, Sichuan Province, to teach painting at the Siyuan Experimental School. The school has only one art teacher for its 49 classes.

Zhao’s influence is not limited to China. Usually in her videos, she has few words and looks quite serious. “With art, I understand the world; it heals my wounds and my grief is released and heard via painting; it enriches my love of nature and hope for the future and it rids me of superficial prejudices,” Zhao states of her ideas on her Weibo account. “Art empowers me to break bounds and go one better, and it opens my eyes to find more beauty around me. Meanwhile, my work also gets viewers inspired and offers comfort.”

Zhao plans to go to Europe for a master’s degree in fine arts and to keep reading, holding exhibitions and publishing new books. Last year, she released a book that teaches beginners how to get started with oil painting. “For an artist, the most satisfying work will always be the next,” says Zhao.

(China Daily)

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