
Wednesday, February 13, 2008
Shanghai Art Show Photos

Thursday, January 10, 2008
Tu Zhiwei's Shanghai Show
Tu Zhiwei's show at the Liu Haisu Art Museum in Shanghai, China has opened. Today, Wang Jie has an interesting review/article in the Shanghai Daily. A link to the original and a mirror reproduction of the article can be found here.
Monday, December 3, 2007
Shanghai Show for Tu Zhiwei

Thursday, September 27, 2007
OPA Midwest Regional

Informal photos of the August opening of his one-man show at the Andreeva Gallery in Santa Fe also can be viewed here. It's fun to see Mr. Tu's talented wife, who made an impromptu appearance with the strong quartet hired for the event.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Santa Fe One-Man Show

Saturday, August 25, 2007
Taos Art Auction

Click here for a preview of all the art works and crafts up for auction. Apparently, telephone bids may be accepted:
If you are interested in placing a bid or would like more information on an item, please call 505.758.2690 x 5.The auction will benefit the Taos Art Museum and Fechin House, located in the former home of Russian emigré artist Nicolai Fechin. (1881-1955). Fechin is said to have designed and hand-carved many of the features of the house, which was finished in 1933.
Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Zhiwei Tu's China Live Webcast

One hour!!
The event was held in connection with Mr. Tu's one-man show at the National Art Museum of China. Tom.com is a "mobile internet company" specializing in web-casting (as opposed to more traditional "broadcasting") to a wide audience throughout China.
The program, naturally, is in Chinese. Just as happens with regular TV, a studio host interviewed Mr. Tu about the NAMOC show, his early years in a remote farming village when he was discovered to be a prodigy at painting, and his move to the U.S.A. to further his art education. What's so different with this "webcast" is that there was ample time to explore additional subjects and take live questions from viewers, apparently sent in by email or text-messaging.
Among the many subjects covered are the differences between art education in China and the U.S., the practicalities of how newly arrived Chinese artists can get by in the West, the inspiration Mr. Tu drew from his artistic mentor in the U.S., etc. etc. Several viewers apparently wanted to know more about the Oil Painters of America, a relatively new but very effective organization of artists (with affiliates in Canada and Mexico) that has helped to introduce the art work of many domestic and newly-arrived foreign artists to a Western audience.
Shorter excerpts of the interview can be viewed on the Tu Zhiwei Art Gallery web site here. For non-Chinese speakers, English summaries are provided.
Of the excerpts available, our favorite is "The Artistic Passion of Tu Zhiwei: Ten Epic Murals in Ten Years." It runs a little over six minutes. In this segment, Mr. Tu discloses that the five giant murals he's completed are just half of the ten he plans to do before "I rest in peace." One of them, he explains, is about Confucious.
Take a look at the first five murals and you can see why so many people are excited at what is yet to come from this extraordinary artistic genius.
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