Loading

Shy

Den Nan-gwang

National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts

National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts
Taichung City, Taiwan

Deng took this photo of a young woman in the courtyard of a traditional farmhouse, echoing Tang-dynasty poet Bai Juyi's?Ode to a Pipa?(a Chinese lute): "After countless entreaties she finally appeared, her face half-hidden by the?pipa?she held." In framing the photo, Den Nan-gwang ingeniously used the foreground scenery—the courtyard wall, decorated with balusters made to look like joints of bamboo. The model is leaning slightly forward, half-hiding her smiling face.?In the left background, a blurry image of a woman leaning on a wall is visible. In the 1960s, photography associations in Taiwan all took part in the "Chinese Cultural Renaissance Movement," a government program instituted in opposition to the cultural destruction wrought in China's Cultural Revolution; even artistic photo portraits had to conform to the national cultural policy. Den Nan-gwang chose an unconventional, elaborate setting for the portrait: The large, upright decorative bamboo-shaped balusters are implicit references to peace and harmony within the family and career advancement, the photo's themes, the gate a foil to the shy young woman's smiling face. In that era, the Nationalists and Communists were still locked in a standoff, and artists had no choice but to comply with national arts-and-culture directives.

Show lessRead more
  • Title: Shy
  • Creator: Den Nan-gwang
  • Location: National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts
  • Physical Dimensions: 45.8 x 35.5 cm
  • Type: photography
National Taiwan Museum of Fine Arts

Get the app

Explore museums and play with Art Transfer, Pocket Galleries, Art Selfie, and more

Interested in Performance?

Get updates with your personalized Culture Weekly

You are all set!

Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites