2 F Vrier 1986 by Chu Teh Chun
2 F Vrier
The Lyrical Abstraction of Chu Teh Chun’s 2 F Vrier
In the winter of 1986, Chu Teh Chun—already a towering figure in the synthesis of Chinese ink traditions and Western abstraction—created 2 F Vrier, a work that distills his signature fusion of calligraphic energy and chromatic depth. The title, a play on the French 2 février (February 2nd), hints at a moment frozen in time, yet the painting itself pulses with movement. Unlike the rigid geometries of European modernism, Chu’s abstraction draws from the fluidity of shuǐ-mò huà (water-ink painting), where brushstrokes are not merely marks but extensions of breath and gesture. This piece emerged during a period when Chu was refining his “lyrical abstraction,” a term critics applied to his ability to evoke landscape and emotion without literal representation.
The canvas is dominated by a storm of blacks, whites, and ochres, punctuated by flashes of crimson—a palette that recalls both the ink-wash mountains of classical Chinese scrolls and the raw physicality of Abstract Expressionism. Chu’s technique here involves layering thin glazes of oil paint, allowing underlying hues to bleed through like ink on rice paper. As the Tate notes, lyrical abstraction prioritizes spontaneity and emotional resonance over formal structure, a principle Chu embodied by working rapidly, often in a single session. The result is a surface that feels alive, where every ridge of impasto and every translucent veil of color suggests depth without illusionism.
Chu Teh Chun and the Paris School: A Cross-Cultural Dialogue
By 1986, Chu Teh Chun had spent over three decades in Paris, a city that both challenged and liberated his practice. Arriving in 1955 from Nanjing, he initially struggled to reconcile the disciplined ink techniques of his training with the radical freedom of post-war European art. Yet unlike peers such as Zao Wou-Ki, who embraced full abstraction earlier, Chu retained a subtle tether to landscape—his works often evoke mist-laden valleys or wind-swept cliffs, even at their most non-objective. 2 F Vrier belongs to this liminal space, where the memory of nature persists as a rhythmic undercurrent.
The painting’s title, with its deliberate misspelling (Vrier instead of février), reflects Chu’s playful engagement with language, much like his visual fusion of traditions. His career had by then been celebrated with retrospectives at the Musée Guimet in Paris and the National Museum of History in Taipei, affirming his role as a bridge between cultures. Critics often note how his works from the 1980s, such as this one, balance the meditative restraint of Chinese art with the explosive energy of artists like Joan Mitchell or Georges Mathieu—both of whom he admired but never imitated.
Chu’s genius lies in his ability to make abstraction feel inevitable, as though the canvas were a scroll unrolling not in space but in time. The crimson slashes in 2 F Vrier are neither accidents nor symbols; they are the artist’s pulse, pressed into pigment.
The Alchemy of 2 F Vrier: Process and Material
Composition: The Illusion of Spontaneity
While 2 F Vrier appears improvisational, its structure is meticulously calibrated. Chu often began with a central axis—a vertical or diagonal thrust—around which he orchestrated contrast. Here, the dense black mass at the left counterbalances the open, almost luminous field to the right, creating a sense of tension akin to the yin-yang principle. The crimson accents, applied with a dry brush, act as visual punctuation, their irregular edges catching light like fractured lacquer.
Surface and Texture: From Ink to Oil
The painting’s tactile quality stems from Chu’s hybrid approach. He thinned his oils to the consistency of ink, allowing for translucent washes, then built up opaque impasto in select areas. The white passages in 2 F Vrier are not mere absences of color but active layers of titanium white, scraped and reworked to mimic the textural variations of aged paper. This method, which he called “painting in reverse,” involved subtracting as much as adding, revealing hidden strata like an archaeological dig.
Own This Masterwork of Lyrical Abstraction
Bring Chu Teh Chun’s 2 F Vrier into your space as a 30×40 cm gallery-framed print, meticulously reproduced to preserve the original’s depth and texture. Free worldwide shipping ensures it arrives ready to hang, with archival materials guaranteeing lasting vibrancy.
Add to Cart — Ships FreeCurating 2 F Vrier: A Guide to Placement
The 30×40 cm dimensions of this print make it ideally suited for intimate settings where its details can be savored. Hang it at eye level in a study or reading nook, where the interplay of black and white rewards close inspection. The warm ochres and crimson harmonize with neutral walls—think soft grays, warm whites, or even deep charcoal—but avoid competing patterns. For a bolder statement, pair it with minimalist furniture in dark wood or matte black; the print’s organic forms will contrast strikingly with clean lines. In larger rooms, consider floating it above a console table, flanked by simple ceramic vases to echo its balance of spontaneity and control.
What frame and materials are included?
The print arrives in a slim, contemporary black frame with a white mat border, using archival-grade materials to prevent warping or discoloration. The frame is lightweight yet sturdy, with a hanging kit included for immediate display.
Where do you ship, and how long does delivery take?
We offer free shipping to all countries, with no minimum purchase. Delivery typically takes 5–10 business days, depending on your location. Tracking is provided for every order.
How long will the colors stay vibrant?
The print is produced with pigment-based inks on acid-free paper, rated for 100+ years without fading under normal lighting conditions. Avoid direct sunlight to maximize longevity.
What is your return policy?
If you’re not completely satisfied, return the print in its original condition within 30 days for a full refund. No restocking fees apply.
Sources & Further Reading
- Tate. "Lyrical Abstraction." Tate Art Terms.
- The Art Story. "Chu Teh-Chun." The Art Story Foundation.
- Musée Guimet. "Chu Teh Chun: Retrospective." Exhibition archive, 1997.
More Works by Chu Teh Chun
Explore the evolution of Chu’s lyrical abstraction through these key pieces, each reflecting his dialogue between Eastern tradition and Western modernity.
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Further Reading
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2 F Vrier arrives framed and ready to hang, with free global shipping and a 30-day satisfaction guarantee. Own a piece of cross-cultural modernism that transcends borders.
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