What To See - Rain
Guo Tianyi
郭天意
Production date
2012
Object Detail
Media
pencil on paper
Measurements
100 x 80 cm
Notes
Working with the simple medium of pencil on paper, Guo Tianyi depicts glimpses of his everyday life with subtle variations and gradations of tone. Crumpled pieces of paper, discarded bottles, folded bedclothes, the light in a corner of an empty room; each carefully composed and deliberately cropped view is rendered in exquisite detail.
Guo Tianyi believes that the subject of landscape is important, and in 2012 he created a series of works depicting scenes inspired partly by photographs and partly by his imagination. What to See—Rain (2012) takes the unexpected subject of rain against a window and turns it into a compelling image. The drops of water running down the window pane appear so real that it’s hard to believe they are not actually liquid, but graphite traces on paper.
This series takes the elements of wood, earth, and water, rendering them as traces of light and shadow. The English title is rendered as ‘What to See’, but the original Chinese may also be translated as ‘What One Sees’, or even ‘How One Sees’. The artist’s intense concentration on observational drawing is, therefore, not simply an exercise in representation, but more like an exhortation instructing the viewer in ‘how to see’: it is a reminder that the ordinary aspects of the world are filled with unexpected beauty.
Guo Tianyi believes that the subject of landscape is important, and in 2012 he created a series of works depicting scenes inspired partly by photographs and partly by his imagination. What to See—Rain (2012) takes the unexpected subject of rain against a window and turns it into a compelling image. The drops of water running down the window pane appear so real that it’s hard to believe they are not actually liquid, but graphite traces on paper.
This series takes the elements of wood, earth, and water, rendering them as traces of light and shadow. The English title is rendered as ‘What to See’, but the original Chinese may also be translated as ‘What One Sees’, or even ‘How One Sees’. The artist’s intense concentration on observational drawing is, therefore, not simply an exercise in representation, but more like an exhortation instructing the viewer in ‘how to see’: it is a reminder that the ordinary aspects of the world are filled with unexpected beauty.
Accession number
2013.057