Qi in Modern Art: Vincent van Gogh and Jackson Pollockhttp:///?article=Qi%20in%20Modern%20Art:%20Vincent%20van%20Gogh%20and%20Jackson%20Pollock Qi in Modern Art: Vincent van Gogh and Jackson PollockBy John Voigt
Qi (life force energy) is the vehicle and expression of the beauty, emotions and passions of art.[1] The two painters Vincent van Gogh and Jackson Pollock were masters who in their outer visions and inner torments (both died in apparent suicides) saw, and experienced Qi; then translated this vision to their art so the observer could partake in the explosion of the beauty and pain of life. However both men when in the actual act of painting transcended their personal torments and entered into a state of near ecstasy by leading and guiding the Qi through a paint brush – as with Van Gogh, or by dripping and spilling paint from a can as with Pollock. The two paintings described here are graphic depictions of Qi. They offer an experiential understanding of how Qi may manifest itself, and offer an approach to a visceral understanding of what Qi is.
The Starry Night (1889)—Vincent van Gogh. Museum of Modern Art, New York City. Qi as ItselfHistorically the first meaning of Qi was "cloud vapor."[2] Many people (the author included) actually see Qi as such a phosphorescent presence. In the painting the mist hovering above the hills resemble this sort of perceived Qi. Qi Manifests as Yin and YangTraditionally the Earth is thought to be feminine yin energy and the Heavens yang masculine force. The swirling thick lines in the central part of the painting resemble an abstract yin/yang symbol. The Three Primal Forces of Qi: Heaven – Human – EarthHeaven Qi is the "first force of nature spiraling down from the celestial moon, stars, and planets."[3]Human Qi is felt with the presence of man-made buildings with their lit windows and occasional blood red roofs, and with the upward pointing church steeple. Earth Qi is most poignant in mountains. The hills, smaller trees and large cypress tree also create an experiencing of Earth Qi. The misty formations hovering above the hills and mountains—besides possibly being a vision of a singular Qi—could represent female energy or Yin rising up from the Earth. The painting is a two dimensional static entity. But when I stood by the sides of the painting looking at it an astonishing thing happened: The elements of the Heaven (Sky) Qi, the clouds, stars, moon, became three dimensional, jutting out from the canvas past the hills and village and trees. In that moment the painting became (at least for me) a singular almost mystical experience of witnessing Qi as a unified entity but also as something that filled each singular image in the painting.
Convergence: Number 10, 1952—Jackson Pollock, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY From a Chinese perspective reality unfolds this way: first Qi as a universal potential—in other words as an invisible non-manifest energy. It becomes kinetic —observable—in the interactions of Yin Qi and Yang Qi, usually depicted in the colors black and white. Yin and Yang then unfold into five realities; in qi work often seen as the Five Elemental Energy Phases (Wu Xing) that carry the colors of green, red, earthen yellow, white and blue. At some level—probably intuitive—Pollock recreated this Daoist cosmology: the underlying foundation of Number 10, 1952 is splashed black and ivory white paint, which are then covered with dripped red, yellow, white, and blue colors. Pollock at this time (1952) was studying eastern mysticism and spoke of "Everything has a soul"…universal energy."[4] Conclusion:Vincent Van Gogh or Jackson Pollock were not painting expository essays about Qi. However, each artist at some level of experiential understanding, seemed aware of Qi (or the lack of Qi) in what they saw and painted. Their work remains for us to marvel at and to enjoy, and in that pleasure experience what Qi is.
Endnotes:[1]^ From John Voigt’s former web site, art-energy.org [2]^ "The Conceptual Scheme of Chinese Philosophical Thinking – Qi": http://www./qi_breath.html [3]^ Elizabeth Moran, et al. The Complete Idiot's Guide to Feng Shui, 3rd ed. pg. 44. Alpha Books, 2005. http://books.google.com/books [4]^ Steven Naifeh. Jackson Pollock: An American Saga. Potter/Crown, 1989, p. 688.
Picture Sources: Convergence: http://3.bp. |
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