Lun Gywe

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Lun Gywe
လွန်းကြွယ်
Born (1930-10-24) 24 October 1930 (age 93)
Rangoon, British Burma
Nationality Burmese
Known for Painting
Movement Impressionist

Lun Gywe (Burmese: လွန်းကြွယ်, pronounced: [lʊ́ɴ dʑwɛ̀]; born 24 October 1930) is a Burmese painter who works in oil and watercolor. Outside of Myanmar his work has been exhibited, often in solo shows, in Japan, the Republic of Korea, the People's Republic of China, Australia, New York, the Republic of Singapore.[1]

Life

Lun Gywe was born in Yangon, Myanmar on 24 October 1930, and was raised by his mother after his father died when he was five months old. From an early age he spent much of his time drawing.[2] He studied under Thet Win, Chit Maung, San Win, Thein Han (painter) and Ngwe Gaing, and graduated from the Art Institute of Teacher's Training in 1954. He was an instructor at the State School of Fine Arts, Yangon (1958–1979) and principal of this school (1977–1979). He also taught at the Fine Art association the University of Rangoon (1960–1979).[3]

He studied in China in 1964, and was awarded a fellowship in art restoration to East Germany in 1971.[3] His year-long stay in China had a strong influence, and he incorporated the Chinese brush and ink techniques into his oils and watercolors. The course in east Germany let him study European masters in East Berlin, Dresden and Potsdam and confirmed his love of impressionism. However, his greatest influence has probably been Thein Han, under whom he studied and with whom he retained a close relationship in his later life.[2]

Work

Lun Gywe has been described as the greatest living Burmese painter. Lun Gywe began painting in a realistic and naturalistic vein, influenced by the major painters of the Rangoon School, Ba Nyan, Ngwe Gaing, San Win, and Thein Han who was his painting master. Over time, his works became more impressionistic and some of the works today might be called expressionistic.[4] His exposure to rapidly executed Chinese ink and watercolor painting during his trip to China seems to have influenced his impressionistic work as he paints quickly and he is extremely prolific.[4] His impressionistic work has been called "action impressionism".[4] Of his Impressionist style, he has said, "I paint according to my emotions, drawing inspiration from smell and textures, light and shadow"[5] An important part of his work focuses on the female form, his favourite subject.[6] A strong believer in Buddhism, his work is unified by his devotion to the principles embodied in that religion of order, harmony, stability and grace. He has said "I find inspiration in calmness. I cannot create a good painting when in an unsettled frame of mind. I often meditate before I start a painting".[2]

Museum Collections

See also

References

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Further reading

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