Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




INTERNET SPACE
China artists work up-close with old masters in Madrid
by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) Jan 27, 2013


With brushes and paint-splotched palette, Chinese artist Yang Feiyun adds the finishing strokes to his latest work: a portrait of the moustached 17th century Spanish King Felipe IV.

An untrained eye would fail to tell the difference between Yang's canvas and the original by the Spanish master Velazquez, hanging inches away in a crowded gallery at Madrid's Prado Museum.

"I have been painting my whole life, ever since I was a child, and Velazquez is a master among painters. He is known in China for his great depth," Yang tells AFP.

A respected artist in China, where he is head of oil painting at the state Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, Yang is now leading 17 other specialists on a pilgrimage to the Spanish capital.

Their mission: to make first-hand copies of some of the jewels of European oil painting and take them home to use in training curious Chinese artists.

"Our aim is to learn a lot and have these works as teaching material in China," Yang told AFP.

"There is not a long history of oil painting in China -- just the past 100 years or so. We are in a learning period."

In other halls of the vast museum, their walls heaving with masterpieces by Titian, Rubens, Goya and El Greco, Yang's companions work quietly at their easels under the curious gaze of visitors.

A few steps from Yang, his companion Guo Zhangzheng is executing a smaller version of Titian's "Emperor Charles V at the Battle of Muehlberg," a three-metre portrait of the lance-wielding monarch on horseback from 1548.

The Chinese artists -- from the state academy and another top fine arts school, the China Academy of Art -- are due to stay for just over two weeks. Each aims to produce a copy of two works from the Prado's collection.

Yang's first go at copying Velazquez has taken him just five days to render virtually complete.

Paintings on the list for their first week's work included "The Three Graces" by Peter Paul Rubens and Goya's "The Third of May 1808 in Madrid," a harrowing image of French occupying forces executing Spanish patriots by firing squad.

The copies will be exhibited in Beijing, the Prado said.

In a corner of one gallery Sun Wengong, 47, stands plying his brushes in front of Vicente Lopez's grim-faced 1826 portrait of the painter Francisco de Goya in a grey-blue coat.

"When I'm in a museum in front of the originals, I always feel like I want to copy them or try and do my own version," Sun says, the messy palette at his feet resembling that of the man in the portrait.

"It helps me a lot as a painter. I have seen lots of prints of the paintings, but prints are nothing like the originals. Being here in front of the originals, you have more direct and true contact with the artists," he added.

"To be here copying the masterpieces of these painters is the best apprenticeship you could have."

.


Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technologies






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERNET SPACE
Goggles fool face-recognition cameras: Japan maker
Tokyo Jan 25, 2013
A "privacy visor" that uses infra-red light to interfere with facial recognition technology has been developed in Japan for people worried about being spotted by computers. The goggles are useful for anyone who wants to avoid their identity being detected by hidden cameras, the inventors say. "Measures for preventing the invasion of privacy caused by photographs taken in secret... are no ... read more


INTERNET SPACE
US, Europe team up for moon fly-by

Russia to Launch Lunar Mission in 2015

US, Europe team up for moon fly-by

Mission would drag asteroid to the moon

INTERNET SPACE
Opportunity At Work At Whitewater Lake

Thawing Dry Ice Drives Groovy Action On Mars

Mars Rover Curiosity Uses Arm Camera at Night

Possible Clues to Ancient Subsurface Biosphere on Mars

INTERNET SPACE
Iran Manufacturing Hi-Tech Spacesuits

TDRS-K Offers Upgrade to Vital Communications Net

An Astronaut's Guide

Mathematical breakthrough sets out rules for more effective teleportation

INTERNET SPACE
Reshuffle for Tiangong

China to launch 20 spacecrafts in 2013

Mr Xi in Space

China plans manned space launch in 2013: state media

INTERNET SPACE
NASA to Send Inflatable Pod to International Space Station

ISS to get inflatable module

ESA workhorse to power NASA's Orion spacecraft

Competition Hopes To Fine Tune ISS Solar Array Shadowing

INTERNET SPACE
Azerspace And Africasat-1a "fit" for Ariane 5 launch

NASA Selects Experimental Commercial Suborbital Flight Payloads

Payload elements come together in Starsem's wrap-up Soyuz mission from Baikonur Cosmodrome for Globalstar

Amazonas 3 in Kourou for Ariane 5 year-opening launch campaign

INTERNET SPACE
New Evidence Indicates Auroras Occur Outside Our Solar System

Glitch has space telescope shut down

Earth-size planets common in galaxy

NASA's Hubble Reveals Rogue Planetary Orbit For Fomalhaut B

INTERNET SPACE
New information on binding gold particles over metal oxide surfaces

Researchers Create Method for More Sensitive Electrochemical Sensors

Phoenix Rising: New Video Shows Advances in Satellite Repurposing Program

Novel sensor provides bigger picture




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement