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14:38 Oct 30 2009

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Tibetan artist depicts celestial beauty
13:28, October 29, 2009  


Dedron explains to visitors about one of her paintings on show in Milan, Italy. (Photo: China Daily)


One thing Tibetan artist Dedron dreads is being in the spotlight. An introvert by nature, she breaks into a sweat with strangers.

However, with two on-going exhibitions on Tibet, in Rome and Milan, that end this weekend, it's difficult for her.

As one of the artists whose works are included in the exhibition, the 33-year-old was invited along with seven others to travel to Italy for face-to-face exchanges with Italian artists and museum visitors.

The soft-spoken Dedron said little in Rome, where one exhibition opened last Friday.

However, when the other opened in Milan on Monday, Dedron found she had nowhere to hide.

On the opening night, dozens of people stopped by her two paintings.

One of them features a pair of Western tourists resting on a street in Tibet, surrounded by traditional castle-like Tibetan dwellings with yak-oil lamps glowing at the windows.

Dedron makes generous use of Tibetan red - the color found on the walls of the landmark Potala Palace and on a Tibetan lama's garment - and usess simple lines.

Some visitors such as Francesca Nacci, an art student from Accademia di Brera, found the painting both inviting and teasing and started to ask about the artist. When Dedron showed up in her traditional Tibetan garment, slim and shy and with her trademark sweet smile, more gathered around her to hear her and discover what visitors later called "the magic of colors".

Dedron, who was born and raised in Lhasa, says she was not particularly sensitive to colors until much later in life, even though her parents often took her to the temples.

She first became aware of colors at the age of 9 when her parents sent her to a summer painting course.

"My limited social skills were a constant concern for my parents," recalls the artist. "My father thought it might help if I joined some interest groups such as a painting class."

While the month-long training failed to produce any results in terms of socializing, it did reveal her talent for art -a painting she made then even bagged a national award.

But she didn't find her calling in life until 13 years later. By then, a fourth-year art student in the Lhasa-based Tibetan University, Dadron visited a temple in Tibet's northeast Ngari, an area with which she was very familiar and whose culture and customs were her inspiration.

It was from these travels, Dadron says, that she discovered "the beauty of nature and of the simple life in a miraculous land filled with silent historical monuments".

"I don't think I had a strong interest in painting even then," she says. "In fact, I was depressed that I was unable to deliver what I felt for Tibet through my painting."

"It was like I had something on the tip of my tongue, but could not utter it," she says.

One day, all a sudden, while staring at the colors of the grottos in the temple, she felt like she had been struck by enlightenment.

"The combinations of different shades felt as familiar as the smell of butter tea - the traditional daily drink for us Tibetans," says Dadron. "Since then, I have always wanted my paintings to deliver that familiar flavor."

Mesmerized by the versatile use of colors in traditional Tibetan art, she spent the next two years going from one temple to another.

Over the past decade, Dedron has created her own pictorial language that is simple yet mysterious. Although it is based on traditional Tibetan art, her work is not a stylistic reproduction of that tradition. Her paintings incorporate modernist, cubist and even surrealist references. Ornamentation, design and color are essential elements of her style.

She has participated in exhibitions in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Kathmandu, Singapore and Australia, and her works can be found in the well-known Li Keran Foundation in China as well as in private collections in Britain, the United States, France and Germany.
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