On Cultural Impact and Stylistic Changes of Art: The Taiwanese Painters Dwelling in China during the Japanese Occupation Time
Abstract: The creation of painting in Taiwan in the early twentieth century was first inspired by Japanese art teachers. The new idea of “realistic painting” introduced at the time allowed the discovery of “local colors.” However, the Taiwanese painters who employed the artistic ideal of “painting one’s intent” were able to escape the limitation imposed by the concept of “local colors.”
How did the painters explore the artistic styles offered by the new global contexts through the colonization of Japan is an important issue that requires in-depth investigation. This issue is further complicated by painters who were not only influenced by the Japanese arts but also the traditional Chinese arts, as some of the Taiwanese painters moved to China after their training in Japan in order to search for a new style that conflates the Eastern and the Western arts. Taking several painters, Liu Jintang, Chen Chengpo, and Guo Bochuan as examples, this paper explores issues of identity, cultural impacts, and stylistic developments of the arts in the early twentieth century.
How did the painters explore the artistic styles offered by the new global contexts through the colonization of Japan is an important issue that requires in-depth investigation. This issue is further complicated by painters who were not only influenced by the Japanese arts but also the traditional Chinese arts, as some of the Taiwanese painters moved to China after their training in Japan in order to search for a new style that conflates the Eastern and the Western arts. Taking several painters, Liu Jintang, Chen Chengpo, and Guo Bochuan as examples, this paper explores issues of identity, cultural impacts, and stylistic developments of the arts in the early twentieth century.
Keywords: Chen Chengpo, Liu Jintang, Guo Bochuan, Xiamen Fine Arts College, Xinhua Arts College, Taiwanese translator
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