Antennas, Elyters and Paper Eyes: in Lausanne, Artist Ding Liren Reinvents the Chinese Art of Insects
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While 234 works from the Brut Art Collection are currently on display in Shanghai, the Lausanne Museum hosts a small set of collages made by a non-agenary artist who is very influenced by the popular Chinese arts "Herbes and Insects." It is the name of a traditional genre in Chinese painting, where one often sees the representation of a branch, of a bouquet of plants or of a briming pond that attracts bees, butterflies, dragonflies, mosquitoes, …
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