Chinanews.com, Hong Kong, December 6th (Reporter Dai Xiaolu) The opening ceremony of the "Spiritual Rhythm Rigid and Soft: He Baili and He Jilan Ink Painting Joint Exhibition" was held on the 5th at the Harbor View Center in Hong Kong.

The exhibition exhibits more than 40 classic works, including artist He Baili's "He Family Landscape" series, artist He Jilan's pioneering ink art, and ink sketches jointly created by the two, hoping to fully demonstrate the unique style and charm of Chinese culture.

  Bao Yanfei, chairman of the organizer China Resources Property and chairman of Zhongyi (Hong Kong), said in his speech that this exhibition contains the innovative feelings of He Baili and He Jilan, a father and son in the painting circle, for ink art.

The works of the two artists complement each other, full of vigorous creativity.

He pointed out that he hoped that Zhongyi would become an excellent art platform, so that more people could understand the importance of ink art as a Chinese cultural heritage, promote the exchange and popularization of Chinese excellent traditional culture, and let Chinese excellent traditional culture integrate into everyone's daily life Life.

  He Baili, the founding vice chairman of the Overseas Chinese Artists Association and the founding director of the Hong Kong Artists Association, said in an interview with a reporter from Chinanews.com that as the fourth-generation inheritor of the Lingnan School of Painting, he has always adhered to the purpose of "optimizing tradition" in creating, studying and Ancient and modern Chinese and Western paintings.

He told the reporter that through his unique thinking on Chinese and Western cultures, he integrated the light and shadow effects of Western paintings and the techniques of various schools into traditional Chinese paintings, creating a unique realm of "Hejia Landscape", allowing ink and wash to flourish through inheritance and innovation. Reveal a new unique charm.

  Another participating artist, He Jilan, said that he was influenced by his father, He Baili, and inherited the excellent traditional Chinese culture. At the same time, his years of art learning experience abroad allowed him to walk out of his own art in the collision and integration of Chinese and Western cultural traditions. road.

He introduced one of his representative works "Hong Kong Style" to the reporter. Through the thick and thin ink lines, and different outlines and abstract color blocks, it fully demonstrates the traditional Chinese yin and yang and the uniqueness of Hong Kong, a city where Eastern and Western cultures blend together. Rhythm and rhythm make people wander and watch, and push the painting scene to infinite depth in the blink of an eye.

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