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Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Scenery 3 Acrylic on canvas 51 x 39 in (129.54 x 99.06 cm) 2012

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Scenery No.1 ink on paper 77 x 36 in (195.6 x 91.4 cm) 2008

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape Yellow 2013 oil on canvas 70.8 x 47.2 in

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Wenming Jinguan acrylic and tea on canvas 95.5x80.5in 2010

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape 004 ink on paper 98.5 x 48.6 in 250 x 123.5 cm 2012

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape Pink, 2013 oil on canvas 70.8 x 47.2 in

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Civilization landscape 2 ink on paper 188x85cm

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape 005 ink on paper 78 x 49 inches 198 x 124.5 cm 2012

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Scenery 001 acrylic on canvas 51 x 39 in (129.54 x 99.06 cm) 2012

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Civilization Landscape 1 ink on paper 74 x 34 in (188 x 86 cm) 2013

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape 003 ink on paper 98.5 x 48.6 in 250 x 123.5 cm 2012

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape 001, 2012 ink on paper 98.5 x 48.6 in

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape pink small 2 150x120 cm 2013

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape pink small 1 150x120 cm 2013

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Landscape pink small 3 150x120 cm 2013

Qin Feng

Qin Feng

Desire Scenery 002 acrylic on canvas 51 x 39 in

QIN FENG    秦风

 

1961 born in Xinjiang, China

 

Qin Feng is a leader of contemporary ink painting and a forerunning representative of the Chinese avant-garde art movement.  Qin studied at Shandong University of Art and Design, and later moved to Berlin, Germany, and then the United States.  His paintings experiment with traditional Chinese ink painting and Western abstract expressionist styles, maintaining a link with the traditional while toying with the imported.  His use of tea, which represents the East, and coffee, the West, in the backgrounds of his ink paintings emphasizes cultural contrasts and his attempt to bring the two together. 

 

Qin’s upbringing in Xinjiang, located in the extreme northwest of China, profoundly influences his work. Once an intersection for Silk Road trade routes, Xinjiang historically has been a center for multicultural and multiethnic coexistence.  This legacy continues today, making Xinjiang a unique locus for different languages including Chinese, Arabic, Uighur, and Hindu.  Qin’s childhood in Xinjiang, and later his travels abroad, exposed him to varying cultures and languages, resulting in his present fascination with written and spoken word, systems of universal communication, and cultural difference.  

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