“I
want to create an engaging dialogue between traditional Eastern craft
and a Western pop aesthetic.”
Jacky Tsai
and a Western pop aesthetic.”
Jacky Tsai
Born in
Shanghai the Chinese collage artist come fashion designer Jacky Tsai came to the United Kingdom to
study at London’s Central St Martins College of Art and Design and stayed. As a
consequence of this life style choice, since 2006, Tsai has been creating a
body of work that combines traditional Chinese crafts, skills and folklore with
Western pop imagery.
As he
explained to Hyperbeast’s
Nate Bodansky last year “My cultural
influences affect my art direction significantly. Though I’ve been living in
London for 8 years, I still experience the cultural difference every day. I
think subconsciously that’s a big part of the reason why I’m always doing the
“East meets West” art to merge both my backgrounds together.”
Tsai came to
the notice of London art scene in 2008 with his floral skull motif design for
the Alexander McQueen fashion label.
About which
he told Wall
Street International “Many Chinese people
are afraid of skulls, and to a certain extent so am I, but the skull image has
become trendy in the Western world, especially in fashion, and I was interested
in this difference in perception in the East and the West. I wanted to see if I
could change the attitude in the East towards the skull, so I tried to
represent it in a beautiful way by using images of nature such as flowers,
butterflies and birds to transform this previously ‘scary’ image. I wanted
people to see the beauty in decay while commenting on the proximity of life and
death.”
It is this ability to juxtaposition perceptions, East and West, fashion
and fine art, which enables Tsai stand with a foot in both camps.
As he has said “It’s almost the same for me as I treat fashion items as
part of my art creations, the only difference is that art is a kind of
self-expression, where I only listen to my own voice.”
And it’s a voice that decrees “Artists from the 1960s who experienced
the Cultural Revolution have dominated the Chinese art market [for] many years.
The new generation needs to develop the motifs and aesthetics in their art,
rather than follow the old trends… I appreciate all the masterpieces that Roy
Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol did, but too many artists try to imitate the style
in the last 40 years or so. Now I feel it’s the time to make my statement of
what I feel is a new Pop Art language in 2014 and develop this in my own way –
a hybrid style of western Pop Art and Chinese traditional craft.”
And Tsai’s reverence for his forebear’s historic skills and tradition combined
with the desire to keep them alive and relevant is a further driver for his
art.
As he says “The complicated manufacturing process and the high
production costs resulted in very high prices. Traditionally only the royal
family or wealthy businessmen could afford them. After the establishment of the
People’s Republic of China in 1949, the vast working class people had little
demand for such luxuries. Young people now are reluctant to learn the skills of
lacquer-carving, and many elders in the business have passed away. Nowadays,
there are only about twenty trained craftsmen left in China who have this
skill. This ancient craft is on the brink of extinction.”
Tsai’s current Self-Titled exhibition is on show at London’s The Fine Art
Society until the 2nd of October.
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