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Saffron Asian Art and Society Series
Hai Shuet Yeung: Innovation in Abstraction Edited by Sajid Rizvi, with texts from Anne Farrer and Li Gongmin

Hai Shuet Yeung: Innovation in Abstraction

Edited by Sajid Rizvi, with texts from Anne Farrer and Li Gongmin

1997

Series ISSN 1740-3103
ISBN 1872843174 | Hard cover | 304mm [h] x 217mm [w] 1872843115 | Soft cover | 297mm [h] x 210mm [w]
ISBN-13 9781872843179
128pp 128pp
UK Price GBP 20.95 GBP 39.95
Overseas Surface GBP 25.95 approx GBP 49.95
Shipping weight 1000g approx 1000g approx
Published by Saffron Books
Distributed by Saffron Distriibuion

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About this book

This book is focused on the career of the self-made artist, Hai Shuet Yeung.

Hai Shuet Yeung, born in 1936 in China's Guangdong (Canton) province, is credited with introducing radical ideas and practices into painting at a time when artistic communities in China, Hong Kong and Taiwan agonise over the future of the genre into the 21st century. His "crumpled paper" technique makes brushwork almost redundant. His images challenge widely accepted notions of perspective, composition and scale. Yeung's abstractions are accessible as 'landscapes,' 'moonscapes' or fantastic
magnifications of minute parts which can be viewed from unexpected angles—sideways or even upside down—or reduced into multiple independent images.

A British resident since 1969, Hai Shuet Yeung is a prolific painter. Hundreds of paintings created by this Grimsby-based artist have ranged in style from classical and scholarly to abstract expressionist. His most recent work has evolved into innovative and complex abstracts produced with an individual technique.

Yeung’s paintings represent a significant point of departure for modern painting—and not only in a Chinese context. The images that he seems to create with wonderful ease have an astonishingly varied vocabulary, layers of meaning and significance, and command a universal appeal. The fact that he has endeavoured to refresh and renew media, technique as well as the subject matter of his painting sets Yeung apart from contemporaries known for variations on guohua, the traditional Chinese painting, or western-inspired abstractions.

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