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Accidental artists

2013-03-13 16:33 China Daily     Web Editor: yaolan comment
Ning Yingxia is a mother who found painting as an outlet to express herself and joined her son in a painting class. Photos provided to China Daily

Ning Yingxia is a mother who found painting as an outlet to express herself and joined her son in a painting class. Photos provided to China Daily

Visit Beijing's 798 Art Zone to appreciate paintings by a group of mothers, who attend art classes with their children. Chen Nan gives you the colorful details.

A group of mothers who learn painting with their children, is exhibiting their works in Beijing's 798 Art Zone.

Titled Mother Artists, most of the art on display are oil paintings. The exhibition was launched on March 8, to coincide with International Women's Day.

One of the works belongs to Chang Ying, 41, who claims that painting cured her postnatal depression.

"I've heard of postpartum depression but I didn't expect it to hit me," says Chang, who suffered from the disorder after she completed her yuezi, or observation of a confinement period of 30 days. (During yuezi, new mothers rest and eat special food to help them recover from the rigors of childbirth.)

"I felt lost and sad, not only because I put on lots of weight but also because my life totally changed."

The former accountant, who is now a full-time home maker and mother, was depressed for about five years.

"I endured the depression because I thought it's a normal feeling for mothers, especially full-time mothers. I ignored it and pretended to be normal," she says.

When her son reached the age of 5, she sent him to a painting class conducted by Chen Wei, a professional oil painting artist.

Attracted by the colors, she decided to join her son.

She says she uses painting as an outlet to express herself and in the process, her perspectives about life widen. She also stopped feeling anxious and loss.

"It's a game between me and my son. He likes drawing cars and we would discuss our paintings together.

"I also enjoy being part of the group. We get together to paint and share about our lives. It's like art therapy," says Chang.

Her work on display is called My Family, a picture of a house covered with snow.

"I used to hate gray clouds and cold winter. But after learning how to paint, I learn to appreciate common objects and interpret them in my own way through colors," she says, adding that she was inspired by a snowy morning during this year's Spring Festival.

Another mother, Wei Yu, 41, who has been learning painting at Chen's studio since November 2012, also says that painting cured her depression.

"I participated in some activities, such as yoga class. I even shopped a lot to make myself feel good, which turned out to be worse," she recalls.

"I thought learning painting was not for me. I attended painting classes in primary school and they were boring," says Wei, who has a 13-year-old daughter.

"But here I can paint freely and without thinking about techniques. I feel happy even when I paint a bag I carry to the supermarket every day.

"Painting is a way to relax and distract myself from anxiety and worries," she adds.

Chen, who has run the children's painting class since 2004, decided to have a class for adults in September 2012 because of increasing demand from the children's mothers. Now, he has more than 100 mothers in his classes.

Chen says the classes for adults, like those for children, do not follow a strict structure.

For mothers, he says, painting is a way to get their social life and confidence back after the arrival of their children.

The artist, who graduated from Minzu University of China in oil painting, started giving art classes after he became a father himself a decade ago. He loved watching the way his daughter paints, which does not follow any particular technique.

He says children's paintings are the most beautiful works in the world. "My daughter only had hair after she was 3 years old, and so in her paintings, all the girls have no hair. As she grows up and starts having hair, she paints girls with long dark hair, colorful skirts and even high heels," says Chen.

"Children have the inborn talent to paint. It is natural," he says. "Painting should be fun and not a burden. I believe that applies to adults in the same way."

 

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