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60年代 - 六十年代·香江墨韵旗袍记 | 1960s - 1960s Hong Kong: An Ink-Wash Rhythm Qipao
60年代 - 六十年代·香江墨韵旗袍记 | 1960s - 1960s Hong Kong: An Ink-Wash Rhythm Qipao
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六十年代·香江墨韵旗袍记
当波普艺术在西方掀起色彩革命,东方的香江裁缝却以针线为笔,
面料肌理尤见匠心:绉纱底料暗织细密菱纹,
存世者不过沧海一粟。彼时香港制衣业方兴未艾,“唐装”
1960s Hong Kong: An Ink-Wash Rhythm Qipao
"When Pop Art ignited a color revolution in the West, the tailors of Hong Kong used needles and threads as brushes, splashing a 'drenched ink' freehand landscape upon silk crepe."
This antique Qipao, crafted in Hong Kong, treats cream-white as its paper and brownish-ochre as its bone, with emerald green and rosy-red as its soul. It deconstructs traditional floral sprays into abstract color blocks—at times resembling lush lotus leaves, at others, flourishing orchids. With "Flying White" (Feibai) brushstrokes mimicking entwined vines, it captures the untamed spirit of Xu Wei’s Inky Grapes, while possessing the sharp edges of a Clyfford Still color-field painting.
The fabric texture reveals extraordinary ingenuity: the crepe base is subtly woven with fine diamond patterns, mimicking the natural fibers of Xuan paper. The printed areas utilize a heavy-impasto technique to create a tactile, embossed feel; the brownish-ochre blocks resemble "dry-ink rubbing" (Cunca), while the emerald spots look like dew on fresh bamboo. Every blurred stain and every flowing line is a non-reproducible "wrinkle of time" from the manual screen-printing process.
Existing pieces are but a drop in the ocean. During that era, the Hong Kong garment industry was flourishing, and "Tangzhuang" (Chinese-style attire) was exported as an Oriental symbol to Europe and America. Yet, a unique piece like this—which deconstructs traditional motifs through abstract ink-wash—is more like a secret artistic experiment. The tailor might not have studied the Records of Famous Paintings of All Dynasties, yet through needle and thread, they echoed the ancient precept: "Take nature as one’s teacher, but find the source of inspiration within the heart." Within these few inches of fabric, they preserved the dazzling moment of collision between Eastern and Western aesthetics.
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