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...Continue " A
whole new world opens up for a talented artist from Taiwan"
There
was, he said, no second choice.
Upon graduation with a bachelor of fine art degree in painting
from the prestigious Academy of Art College in San Francisco,
Lin was determined to continue his education to the achievement
of a master of fine art degree. His father, however, who had sponsored
his education, admitted he was out of resources.
“Every student, upon graduation,” said Lin, “held
an one-man art exhibit at the Academy. I sent a postcard to
the Portnoy Galleries to invite Howard and Trish Portnoy to
my show. They called me immediately and said, “We love
your work; when your show is done, bring your work to us.” I
have since made the tuition for my master’s degree through
this gallery.”
This weekend, Lin will attend the opening of his exhibition of
new paintings at Portnoy Galleries in Carmel, where he has been
represented for the past four years.
“There is no greater pleasure for the gallery owner,”
said Trish Portnoy, “than bring a young artist along from
obscurity to success. Watching Po pin Lin row, both as an artist
and as a man, has been a reward in itself; but seeing clients
drawn to collecting his work has been very special to both of
us.”
“Now, he is gaining national recognition, and we couldn’t
be more proud,” added Howard Portnoy.
Lin recognized his own proclivity and, perhaps more important,
his passion for art at a very early age, during elementary school
in Taiwan.
Watercolor was very fashionable at the time,” said Lin.
“I grew up on the countryside, so I had no chance to experience
the range of media I might have seen in the art museums. But I
did discover Van Gogh’s masterpieces in my textbook. I was
in second grade, and I copied his work merely because I thought
I could. I didn’t care who he was at the time, I just like
what I saw.”
Lin’s practice yielded first-place results elementary and
junior high school. Recognizing his abilities and his interest,
his parents paid for after-school painting classes, including
a Saturday session, which required an hour bus ride each way and
return the young artist to his home around midnight. He was 13.
“After middle school,” he said, “I took a test
to get into Fu Shin Art School in Taipei, a very famous and important
art school for exceptional students. My chance was very small
and I was the only one in my high school to be accepted. I knew
if I wanted to be an artist, I had to begin my serious study at
early age.
Lin continued to submit his watercolor landscape to various competitions,
not only among fellow student, but also at the national, professional
level. He won these, as well.
Upon graduation from high school, Lin completed to years of required
service in the army, most of which, owing to his prestigious alma
mater, was spent in artistic activities.
“When I returned from the army, I wanted to go to college,”
he said, “but I didn’t want to take the five-month
preparatory classes. My father suggested I open a tea shop to
support my family’s tea framing. Even thought my father
was president of the elementary school, he would get up at 4 a.m.,
farm for three hours, then changes his clothes and go to work.
After school, he would returned to farm until 10 p.m. Most presidents
play golf after school. My father kept his schedule day after
day for 30 years. It was my responsibility endured for one year
until he realized he owned it to himself to pursue his art. Two
friends from Fu Shin, who study at the Academy of Art College,
convinced their colleague to join them.
“When I came to the Academy,” he said, “I discovered
oils. No one was painting in watercolor. I didn’t understand
the medium, but masterful teachers opened my eyes to what I could
do with it. Oils can make more spontaneity, can demonstrate the
brush stroke or palette knife to show the textural qualities of
a subject. It is a powerful medium that allows for a lot of different
techniques and expressions.”
Lin also discovered fellow Academy student Ariel, his wife of
seven months, who is now a Web designer and her husband’s
most ardent admirer.
“We have been such good opportunities for his art in California,”
she said. “In Taiwan, the art market is it as open as it
is here; it’s hard for artists to get noticed, to succeed.
And yet, wherever he is, whether in the State or Taiwan, his paintings
show his personality and life experiences. Of course, his subjects
change, but his style does not. You still see Po Pi n Lin.”
Lin has won the award of Excellence in the Oil Painters of America’s
national and regional exhibitions in 2001 and 2002 and in now
a signature member of the OPA. He was named “one of the
21 finest American artists under 31” by Southwest Art magazine.
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