Untitled (Landscape)

Title
Untitled (Landscape)
Creator
Year/Period
c.1970s
Region
Malaysia
Dimension
Image size: 38.9 x 56.8 cm,
Image size: 50.7 x 68.7 cm (Mount)
Accession No.
2001-03356
Credit Line
Gift of Carolyn Wong on behalf of the Huang Yao Foundation. Collection of National Gallery Singapore.

Born to a literati family in Shanghai, China, Huang Yao (1914-1987) received his formative education from his father in classical literati traditions and calligraphy, particularly in the archaic scripts of oracle bone and bronze inscription. In the 1930s, he gained recognition as a talented cartoonist for creating the comic character “Niu Bi Zi” which was widely used as an educational resource in schools. Huang travelled to Southeast Asia after the end of World War II in 1945, and resided in different countries before settling permanently in Malaysia in 1956. He worked primarily as an art educator until his retirement in 1973. A prolific artist, he had held 23 solo and group exhibitions and six retrospective exhibitions.Huang’s landscapes are heavily influenced by Mi Fu (1051-1107), a Song dynasty calligrapher and painter famous for the “Mi dots” which are ink diffusions caused by extremely wet brushstrokes on paper. In the tradition of Chinese landscape painting, the emphasis is on the vast mountain while the human figure is rendered insignificant.