The painting Naughty Monkey features a primate with detailed fur texture against a muted background
Memory is rarely a linear narrative; it is a texture, granular and layered, much like the sediment of the earth itself. For Taiwanese artist Chung Shun-Wen, the act of remembering is physically bound to the land of Meinong, a region at the foot of Li Mountain in southern Taiwan, steeped in the rhythms of Hakka culture.
Born into a lineage of celebrated wordsmiths—her grandfather, the literary giant Chung Li-Ho, and her father, the writer Chung Tie-Min—Chung Shun-Wen grew up in an atmosphere where storytelling was the currency of existence. Yet, unlike her forebears who captured the world in ink and prose, she chose to document the quiet poignancy of life through the medium of mineral pigment painting. Her canvas is not merely a surface for representation, but a vessel for the accumulation of time, grinding the stones of her homeland into a visual silence that speaks louder than words.
Chung’s chosen medium—mineral pigment painting—is an art of patience and geology. Composed of finely ground mineral stones bound by animal glue, the technique requires a meditative slowness. The pigments retain the physical characteristics of the earth: they have weight, grit, and an inherent luminosity that chemical synthetics cannot replicate.
This materiality is essential to Chung’s aesthetic. Her palette is dominated by warm, earthy tones that seem excavated directly from the soil of Meinong. There is a tactile quality to her work; the viewer can almost feel the coarseness of the stone and the delicacy of the bind. It is a technique that does not just color a surface but builds it, layer by layer, much like the formation of memory itself.
In works such as Naughty Monkey, Chung demonstrates her mastery over the mineral medium to evoke texture and atmosphere. The subject, typically associated with kinetic energy and mischief, is rendered here in a state of sudden, arrested stillness. The fur is painted with such meticulous care that it appears rustled by an invisible breeze, and the mouth hangs slightly open—a frozen micro-moment of surprise or delight.
This attentive gaze extends to the domestic sphere. In Cat In My Yard, the animal is not a mere decoration but a sentient presence. The amber eyes look beyond the frame, suggesting an interior world accessible only to the subject. Chung employs a technique reminiscent of traditional fine brushwork, layering the fur with a flow and delicacy that contrasts with the granular weight of the pigments. These subjects—monkeys in the forest, cats in the courtyard—are elevated from the mundane to the mesmerizing, acting as anchors for the artist’s affection for her surroundings.
Perhaps the most profound emotional resonance in Chung’s oeuvre is found in her Family Memories series. Here, the artist turns her gaze toward the inevitable fragility of life. Rather than traditional frontal portraits that project a composed persona, Chung captures her father and grandmother from behind, in moments of rest or vulnerability.
This perspective is born of intimacy. As the youngest daughter, Chung shared a ritualistic connection with her father, often massaging his back to relieve pain after she returned from work or studies. It was in these quiet moments that she studied the topography of his aging body—the gentle curvature of the spine, the graying of the hair, the texture of skin weathered by time.
The mineral pigments, traditionally used to render the iridescent feathers of birds or the velvet of petals, are here repurposed to map the geography of aging. The silver strands of her grandmother’s hair, coiled into a bun that retains only the faintest memory of youth’s black luster, become a testament to a life lived for others. The calluses on palms and the deep lines etched into necks are not flaws, but inscriptions of history.
Chung paints these figures with a raw honesty that transcends grief. The realization of a loved one’s twilight years often brings a sharp pang of sorrow, yet Chung transmutes this pain into a heavy, beautiful reverence. The stillness of the subjects—caught in a midday nap or a moment of repose—suggests a peace that balances the weight of impending loss.
Chung’s observation of life extends to the botanical world of her hometown. In her Growing up Wild and Southern Collections series, she directs her attention to the often-overlooked flora of the roadside—wildflowers and weeds that persist without fanfare.
She engages in a visual alchemy, placing these modest plants against backdrops of gold leaf. This artistic choice sacralizes the ordinary, elevating a roadside weed to an object of refined, almost religious, beauty. It is a statement on value: that life, no matter how small or common, possesses an inherent dignity.
In autumn, the artist ventures into the wilderness to collect seeds. To the untrained eye, these withered husks might represent death or decay. However, for Chung, they are the carriers of dormant vitality. By meticulously documenting each seed, leaf by leaf and grain by grain, she acknowledges the cyclical promise of spring. The seeds, scattered across the canvas like stars in a southern sky, glow with a faint, inner light—a reminder that even in the dormancy of winter, or the twilight of a human life, there remains an enduring energy waiting to return.
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