點和線是好朋友。

Dots and lines are good friends.

2013.09.24
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    Essays, Sketches of Pulo Pinang

    Introduction

    I had the privilege of getting to know Kiah Kiean when I curated his art exhibition at Alpha Utara Gallery in 2005. Since then, we developed a friendship which has been greatly augmented by our service as members of the Penang State Art Gallery and our participation in publishing four art books, him as the designer and I as part of the editorial team.

    Though I know him only for five short years, I felt as if I have known him all my life, or rather, all his life, since I am the older one. Kiah Kiean had started drawing early in his life. I have seen his drawings from age five, through his primary, secondary and tertiary schooling years, to the present. His drawings show that he possesses a God gifted talent and I am impressed with how he made use of that talent, with hard work and persistence, maturing into the artist he is today.

    I admired Kiah Kiean’s works since I first laid eyes on them. Kiah Kiean has a keen eye for the essential details and essence of things, fortified by his architectural training at the Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang and his flair in graphic design. He is able to distill a chaotic street scene and reduce it to his now distinctive streetscape. Though his subject matter may be rustic buildings, his drawings exude an obvious elegance and stylishness which are most pleasant to the eyes. All his sketches in this book were done plein-air i.e. on the spot, in the open air. None of them is drawn from photographic images. Artistically, Kiah Kiean has developed a visual language of his own, elegantly distorting his subject matter, ruling out the use of a ruler, and demonstrating clearly that he is not reproducing photographic images. However, Kiah Kiean has the habit of taking photographic record of his subject matter. On hindsight, this habit has become an invaluable historic record as a number of the buildings and places found in this book are no more to be found (as at November 2009, the buildings at pages 18, 19, 24, 25, 28, 29, 88, 105, 127, 133, 144, 145, 156, 157, 158, 159, 161 have since been demolished).

    I am glad Tan Lye Hoe, Kiah Kiean’s art tutor and three of Kiah Kiean’s comrade in arms lent their support to this book by writing an article each. Tan Yeow Wooi is an acclaimed restorer of historic buildings, whose projects include the UNESCO award winning Han Chiang Temple. Khoo Cheang Jin, the president of the Penang Water Colour Society, is a practicing architect and artist who, like Kiah Kiean, has combined his passion in both disciplines to produce well sought after Penang streetscapes. Ambiga Devy is a fellow State Art Gallery Committee Member and a fervent activist for the arts. I also thank Tan Yau Chong for his editorial contribution.

    It has been a great pleasure editing this book. This collection of Kiah Kiean’s sketches lent to itself without much effort on my part. It depicts the Penang we seem so familiar with yet in a very fresh manner. It showcases the Penang we love and preserves the face of Penang which is fast disappearing. This is a book for every Penang lover.

    Lee Khai • Penang


    The Power of Ch’ng Kiah Kiean’s Dreams

    What makes Ch’ng Kiah Kiean he is today is his aspiration and passion for art. This double-degree holder – one in Housing, Building & Planning; the other in Architecture – departs from his professional training to become a successful artist and graphic designer, all because he believes in the power of dreams.

    No teacher could be more proud than to have an illustrious student who wants to go where he wants to and be what he wants to be. He wants to be an artist so much so that at one stage when Kiah Kiean was under my tutelage in art did he declare that his first love was art.

    As his tutor and mentor, I have never in any way doubted his intention as he has shown his talent, potential and love for this creative subject. Quiet and shy though he may be, he has on the contrary, displayed a sense of individuality and persistence to express his ideas in his own personal style although when he was in my class, he was always prepared to go though the mills, meticulously doing academic exercises, not leaving out any details in his studies of still-life.

    Today, he has freed himself from all the academic inhibitions to take his own route to produce thought-provoking sketches with his sensitive line expressions. Though he might be modest in certain ways, I would say that he is definitely bold when it comes to art as is evidenced in his works in this book of his entitled Sketches of Pulo Pinang.

    Kiah Kiean experiments with and explores all possibilities of expressing lines with graphite, giving his viewers much thought-provoking experience. As a direct approach to communicating with lines and tones he opts for just black and white sans colours so that his audience may enjoy his works without other distractions.

    Through this approach he has displayed his strength and versatility in expressing a wide range of subjects from street scenes to buildings and from boats to houses on the sea-front, employing different treatment in styles where he has shown to be much at ease with constructive realism which is much reminiscent of his training in architectural drawing. However, that does not deter him from going impressionistic, even approaching the semi-abstract with expressive vigour and freedom, thus asserting his competence in this medium.

    This fine collection of drawings put together by Ch’ng Kiah Kiean in one book Sketches of Pulo Pinang, is indeed a great accomplishment for a young lad and is so commendable for the high quality of the labour of love.

    Tan Lye Hoe • Penang


    A Burst of Powerful Lines

    Those lines in graphite may look askew and awry, yet they are so bold, powerful and penetrating making you wonder if they are really by the hand of the quiet, shy and skinny Ch’ng Kiah Kiean.

    When you come to know Kiah Kiean better, you will discover a volcano of artistic passion and creativity right beneath his gentle demeanour.
    I first met Kiah Kiean in 1996 in a public slide show organised by Nanyang Folk Culture, a local cultural group of which I was a key player. It was quite a pleasure to see an architecture student coming out of the campus walls to take part in arts and cultural activities. Soon after that, he became a stalwart of the group and together we organised many arts and cultural activities in which his multi-faceted talent and ability were brought into play.

    Since high school days, Kiah Kiean’s creativity in painting had already surpassed that of his peers and even many artists who boasted to be professional. Besides painting, he is also adept at calligraphy, photography and graphic design.

    The old Penang is one of the major themes of Kiah Kiean’s sketches. Born and bred in George Town, he has fond memories of and a strong love and concern for the heritage of the city. In the recent years, as development has caused much damage to the old cityscape, he walked the streets even more frequently in order to preserve the disappearing street scenes and buildings in his sketch book.

    But Kiah Kiean’s sketches are not direct, realist representations of the old buildings and street scenes of George Town. They are always imbued with his passion and affection toward his home city. By representing the buildings and street scenes with a twist, he is in effect expressing his affectionate impressions of his subjects.

    In the sketches, Kiah Kiean embraces his subjects, be they buildings or street scenes, with strokes of thick and thin lines in so powerful a manner that the subjects are somehow twisted. Such an affectionate embrace of his subjects is always interesting and very often touching.
    Not only being a burst of powerful lines, Kiah Kiean’s sketches are also a lively dialogue in black and white. The abstract and the concrete, the dynamic and the static, and the tense and the lax can always find their dialectic spaces in the visual dialogue, in which the spaces left blank always have a weight.

    Now, having captured so many images of George Town with his graphite pencil, it is time for Kiah Kiean to share with the world his love for the heritage city. With all my heart, I wish his solo exhibition and the publication of his sketches collection a great success.

    Tan Yeow Wooi • Penang


    The Magician Who Makes Buildings Come Alive

    In 1995 I returned from Singapore to work in Penang. I met Kiah Kiean on my first day at work sometime in May. He was then an attachment student at an architectural firm. Both the firms we worked with were in the same building. He was modest and reticent. I saw him almost on a daily basis but we did not interact much. A polite greeting was all we exchanged when our paths crossed.

    I only found out about his love for art when he showed me his portfolio one day. Once acquainted, I realised we both share a passion for art and we were at different times active in the art society of our alma mater Chung Ling High School. Both of us were president of the art society. These common backgrounds brought us close together.

    Since then, we interacted much in art. From the joint exhibition at the Syed Alatas Mansion in Armenian Street in 1995, to being involved in the activities of Nanyang Folk Culture and the Penang Water Colour Society. With some friends we set up the Ching Lotus Humanist Space at China Street. From sketching outdoor together to discovering the fun with digital photography together, the shy reticent young man is now the owner of a graphic design firm.

    Kiah Kiean’s accomplishments in art are expansive. Among the many are his streetscape sketches. He has a sensitive perception for buildings. With his exaggerated yet balanced form and his seemingly chaotic yet emotive lines, he brings the streetscape, especially old buildings, he sketches to life. Each modest or even dilapidated old building seems to come alive with vigour, proudly showing off.

    You would realise Kiah Kiean’s tidiness if you visit his office or his home, everything is spick and span, very much the image he projects of himself. The wild lines produced by his hand seem incongruous with his character. Perhaps that’s the real Kiah Kiean.

    I wish him the very best for his third solo exhibition and the publication of this marvelous collection of his works.

    Khoo Cheang Jin • Penang


    Essence

    Ch’ng Kiah Kiean has travelled a long way from the young person who honed his artistic skills under the tutelage of Tan Lye Hoe. Today he combines his architectural training and his keen, intuitive eye to produce works that can only be described as haunting in their depiction of a city in the transitions of change.

    Taking a journey, very much with his father in mind, he has captured George Town with a stylish freedom in his lines and spaces, remembering the footsteps taken by his father – from the Swatow Lodge in Armenian Street where many of his Teochew clansmen frequented to the shop house where he stayed when he first arrived in the then Malaya – picturing a soul on its quiet journey, remembering and memorizing every tone and shade of that life.

    Sentimental sweeping lines, sometimes colour washed, sometimes in shades of grey accentuated with black ink and different thicknesses of graphite, are used to create his expressions of streets, lanes, buildings and cityscapes with elegant style.

    Here is an artist who also has a quirky sense of humour – look for his juxtapositional use of shop signage in his street scenes, be it in calligraphy or typography, often telling a story of its own. His depth of skill emerges with his use of improvised equipment like sharpened bamboo and chopsticks to get finer details when using Chinese ink.

    Kiah Kiean’s love for the city and its heritage is conspicuous in this book. By representing the nooks and corners often ignored by the passer-by, he accentuates and thus elicits thought-provoking questions from the viewer of his works.

    These sketches are also wonderful reminders of what George Town was and sometimes still can be today. A diary in graphite, they have captured the essence of childhood experiences in the streetscapes of his present life.

    Ambiga Devy • Penang


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    「線條的故事」Line-line Cerita


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    20091127 Armenian Street, Penang II

    這是離我家最近的一個綠地,小時後爸爸會帶我和妹妹到那兒散步.

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20091127 Armenian Street I

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20091018 Beach Street, Penang

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20090921 Chew Jetty, Penang

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20090920 Chew Jetty, Penang

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20090920 Victoria Street, Penang

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20090913 Beach Street, Penang

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20090913 Armenian Street, Penang

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    20090906 Toh Aka Lane

    Size: 28 x 76 cm
    Media: graphite on paper


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    热爱化行动 庄嘉强素描乡土做记录

    报导:彭可晶
    摄影:蔡进强、部分由受访者提供

    “表达对家乡的关爱有许多的方法,我用我的素描为我熟悉的乡土环境做纪录。”生长于斯、久居于斯的庄嘉强,在他的个人部落格如此写道。他热爱槟城,热爱这一片他土生土长的土地,他将这份热爱转化成为实际行动,透过画笔来阐释他对槟城的深切情感,咏赞这片土地的美丽,并通过各个介面,让全球各地的人透过他的画作,认识槟城的人文景观,进而来到这个小岛,亲近这个小岛,并和庄嘉强一样,无可自拔地爱上这个小岛。

    人对于一个地方的记忆,在时间不断流逝下,也许会逐渐变形,甚至是消逝。庄嘉强是在乔治市的怀抱里长大。长大后,他把来自于生活周遭的街景或物景,全都藉由一支画笔,呈现在素描画作中,把自己对槟城的情感移入画中,传达出他对这片土地自然又真实的感觉,表达他对这片土地的认同。

    走透乔治市老街

    最初,他画这些老街老巷,是为了课业需要,房屋,建筑与策划系与建筑系毕业的他,在理科大学念书时,常常需要到处去勘察和观摩建筑物的架构,于是他带着画笔,走透了他最熟悉的乔治市。那原本只为交差的画作,不知怎么的,他慢慢地竟画成了一个乔治市建筑街景系列。

    自小就热爱绘画的他,不选择油彩、水彩画来描绘槟城,他说,用素描来呈现他画笔下的槟城,仅需用最简单的画具和材料,就可藉由简单的线条,将自己对街景或建筑的观察、体验等思考过程,在素描里头加入自己的感触。他说,只有通过自己对空间的体验,才会感受建筑物与街景之美。他就这样用最简单却又最直接的方式,在每一张素描画作里注入他对槟城的情感。

    岛内的建筑很多都因积极发展快速而迅速凋零,他以绘画记录槟城风貌,那槟城人每天随处可见、再平凡不过的街景,在他的黑白素描画作里,神奇地呈现了立体感,让槟城人倍感亲切与感动,也让槟城人发现到,原来每天就处在身边的建筑物,通过素描来呈现,会呈现另一种风貌的美丽。

    他的画作仅有黑白两色,却溢满了他对槟城的情感,那栉次邻比的建筑物、骑楼下搭出的棚子、各式各样各种语言的广告招牌,散发出槟城独有的特殊味道。在熟悉的情景中,他的画作有着深遂的内涵,和浓得化不开的人文气息,直截了当地表达了这片土地的特色和珍贵之处。

    帮老房子画遗照

    他半开玩笑地笑说,画了这么多副素描,最无奈却又一定要去完成的素描,就是帮老房子画“遗照”。近年拆迁改建的风气风起云涌,逐步地改变了乔治市的风貌,也把先辈留下来的街景一一毁掉。2001年,他就和一班文化工作者策划了“告别社尾万山艺术展”,用行动艺术来预先向这个作为无数槟城人集体回忆的批发菜市告别。

    他也帮已经拆迁的头条路天生堂药行画过“遗照”,这个他熟悉的场景,在终究要熄灯挥别槟城人之前,庄嘉强拎着画具,赶紧把这即将消逝在岛上的街景框进他的画作里,也一并把自己对这里的回忆感情,一并框进画里。

    最近,他也画了要迁离乔治市的老字号药行“仁爱堂”,他从大街(China Street)的角度把“仁爱堂”画进去,但是他说,这次倒不是特意去画“遗照”,而是他之前就想画一副大街的街景,刚巧就在“仁爱堂”事件发生的时间点上,他就“顺道”把“仁爱堂”也画进去了。

    在乔治市成长的他,并没有对每天看惯的街景、建筑物久而生厌,谈起乔治市的一物一景,他眼神坚定地说:“从小到大,我都认为槟城是一个最美丽的地方。”他说,小时候就住在台牛后那带,小时候,街角的转角处就是一家照相馆,那带对他来说,就是童年生活最熟悉的场景。

    聚焦起童年记忆

    谈起二十多年前的回忆,他还隐约记得,自己曾经去照相馆照过相,而那旁边就是卖蚝干粥的摊子,他还常常步行到那里买早餐。再后来,照相馆结业,辗转成了马华公会的会所。对这个地方有着特殊情感的他,就把这个场景画下,把自己的童年记忆聚焦凝结起来。

    2000年,庄嘉强开了他第一次的创作个展,2002年,他在“我的素描日记”的个展中,展出约30副素描画作,这也是他第一次把他笔下的黑白槟城展现在公众眼前。今年,时隔7年,累积了更多画作的他,终于在年秒要再开素描个展,他也终于要把这些年的素描画作集结成册出版。而这些,都是他对家乡的一份情感与激情的具体证物。 他说,除非有一天整个乔治市夷为平地,否则他是不会停止把乔治市的每一分美丽绘进他的画作里。“这大概是我一生都会做的事情了。”庄嘉强语气平淡却又让我感受到,他对槟城坚定的热爱。

    感受场景的氛围

    也许是随兴随喜,庄嘉强才能看到最美丽的景色,才能感受场景的氛围,画出充满情感的素描画作。有些画家会预先设定自己要在什么时候,什么地点作画,庄嘉强却不。他说,平常开车经过某个老街或老房子,他觉得这个场景不错的话,周末他就会带着画具来作画。

    他以一种怡然自得的态度作画,这么多年来,都没间断过作画的习惯,每个周末,他卸下正职工作的繁忙生活后,就会往老街钻。他说,他在画素描时,一坐下来画,就至少画两个小时以上,有时候会画一副,有时候两幅,想到就画,没有拘限。 他笑说,他常常在街头作画,却不曾有人来驱赶或干扰他,在地的居民对他都很友善,大家顶多会问好奇他说:“你为何要画这些啊!”他都会回答说:“因为很漂亮嘛!”还有贴心的居民看他在日光下作画,还会返回屋内,取出饮用水给他喝,让他感受到浓浓的槟城人情味。

    素描画作贴上网

    很多人藉着庄嘉强的画作,进而认识了这个美丽的小岛。而他却谦虚地说,他只是因为爱槟城,才会尽自己小小的力量,让更多人可以认识槟城之美。每次开画展,总是有很多喜欢槟城的外国朋友,买下他一幅幅的画作,把画作当成亲生孩子看待的他,即便有丝丝不舍,但想到可以藉由画作,让更多人认识槟城,於是他就释怀了。

    除了在画展上间接地向全世界推介槟城,他还参与了一个叫Urban Sketchers的部落格活动,这个部落格是让全世界的绘画爱好者,把自己所在的地方街景绘下后,再贴上网,藉由与电视或照片不同的媒介,来呈现各个地方风情。

    庄嘉强把他的槟城街景素描画作贴上去后,很多人讶然惊艳,原来世界上竟有如此独特的景色,大家纷纷留言给他,跟他交朋友,也有画家朋友提出要到槟城写生。早前,就有经由这个网站交流结识的泰国画家朋友,特地飞来槟城写生,庄嘉强就把泰国画家朋友带去乔治市街头、带去姓氏桥,几个人就席地而坐,快乐地把槟城画下。