Reborn in silk embroidery tableau

Updated: 2015-03-24 08:19

By Ning Hui(China Daily)

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Reborn in silk embroidery tableau

Silk Equus (right), a double-sided silk embroidery tableau of Tim Flach's horseback photo (left). [Photo provided to China Daily]

Recalling the challenges in the process, she says: "Photography is especially difficult for embroidery because it requires great attention to its subtle light and shadows.

"The original artwork, be it painting or photograph, serves as a blueprint while the recreation is a result of an in-depth study with personal appreciation."

For the horseback photo, Huang hand-picked the 80 colors needed for the work and used dozens of different types of stitches. "Because the picture has a very simple yet abstract frame," she says, "while I was working on it, none of my colleagues could tell what the picture was about. It's my own journey."

The exhibition where Silk Equus made its first appearance is called Flow: Transformation Materials in Contemporary Chinese Craft. Part of the 2015 UK-China Year of Culture exchange events, the exhibition features selected works from 12 individual craft-design workshops from Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, a city near Suzhou.

Along with the Su Xiu silk piece, these exhibited crafts demonstrate not only a resurgence of traditional skills-using bamboo, silk and ceramics-but also a sense of "blending", where the old meets the new.

A UNESCO-listed craft and folk-art city, modern Hangzhou has the creative power of the celebrated China Academy of Art, now presided over by the Pritzker prize-winning architect Wang Shu. Wang's work was once described as "evoking the past without direct reference to history", a statement the exhibition Flow was intended to follow.

To successfully communicate and achieve blending, Jack Qu, executive director of the China Design Center, says: "It is important to first demonstrate to a different audience how traditional skills work."

Qu says he hopes the familiarity Western audiences have with Flach's work will help them better enjoy the silk embroidery. Both Flach and Huang are now planning further collaborations.

"As the China season of the UK-China cultural exchange year is to welcome hundreds more activities in UK, I hope different communities can work together to explore the core concept of creativity," says Xiang Xiaowei, cultural minister counselor at the Chinese embassy in London.

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