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CHENGDU, Oct. 10 (Xinhuanet) -- A reclusive Chinese
painter stunned audiences with paintings made with his tongue, according to
Chengdu Evening News.
Wang Yide, aged about 50, lives in a small town in
Jianyan city,southwest China. He runs a small photo shop and goes fishing with
his father in leisure time.
Wang agreed to do two paintings upon the request of
the reporter. Prior to his work, Wang drank a little liquor, which he claimed
was a tradition in tongue painting.
With the ink made ready, the painter dipped his
tongue in it and brushed a few black spots on the paper, which were
unrecognizable initially but turned out to be a lotus, a favorite subject in
traditional Chinese paintings.
He was somewhat embarrassed when he slurped and
drooled ink during his painting.
For the second painting, of a laughing Buddha, Wang
used his finger to draw a sketch first and colored it up with pigment using the
tongue.
Wang learned the skill from his master, who was a
student of Huang Ernan, said to be the inventor of tongue painting in the early
last century, according to Wang. As far as he knew, no others could do tongue
painting since his master died by the end of the last century, Wang said.
Wang warned against imitating his tongue painting
without proper guidance, as the tongue came in contact with ink and pigment that
could be poisonous. He said tongue painting was unable to do delicate lines and
its subjects were therefore limited. These limitations identify it just a "minor
skill" in traditional Chinese painting, Wang added. Enditem |