History & BackgroundI was born in Taiyuan in northern China in 1967,
during the Cultural Revolution, and named Ge,
meaning “Revolution”.
As a child I loved to draw. I soon became interested
in photography and lacking a darkroom, I managed
to print photos in the darkness under my bed.
 At 16 I went to Xiamen College of Arts and Crafts in
southern China to study traditional Chinese
painting. I learnt how to balance the empty spaces
and the subjects in my paintings and how to paint
the elegant lines of bamboo.
At 19 I decided to cycle back home from Xiamen to
Taiyuan. I cycled the length of China on a traditional
bicycle with no gears. It was a long, hard journey,
trudging and cycling over the mountains for a
month. The experience taught me that even very
difficult tasks can be achieved by taking one step at
a time - you simply need to be bold enough to
believe in your initial idea.
This new understanding helped me to graduate top
of my class, and soon afterwards several of my
works won awards in the first 'All-China Genre
Painting Exhibition'. These works were then
acquired for the Chinese national collection and
exhibited in the Chinese National Arts and Crafts
Museum in Beijing.
In 1989 I moved to England. As I hardly spoke a word
of English, the only way for me to earn a living was
to sell art. I sold small works in craft markets, and
soon began to have solo exhibitions all over the UK.
Alongside the exhibitions I taught art workshops.
I have now lived half of my life in China and half in
England, and I like to think that my art is a fusion of
the best of both East and West. Ideas & InspirationsMy favourite subject to paint is people.
I have lived in three very different places-northern
China, southern China and England-and it is always
the people that make a place special.
I became interested in graffiti because the simplified
style of stencilled art has a raw, direct feel which
can convey the charm and wit of the people I want
to paint.
 In my graffiti work I try to bring to life an everyday
place, by adding people with a story and a character
of their own. When my graffiti people enter a very
ordinary space, their presence brightens it up. From Palette to Picture used to take a sketchbook wherever I went, but now
I have discovered the power of the digital camera. I
always carry my camera everywhere. I love being
able to capture an image so instantly and take it
home to inspire my pictures.
Originally my photos were just a source of inspiration
for artwork. Nowadays I am using the photographs
more directly, blowing them up and printing them on
canvas as a background for my graffiti. I enjoy the
interaction between places and people. This is a
major attraction of graffiti. I think of a character I
would like to paint, then search out a perfect location.
I photograph the location, bring it home to my studio
and stencil my character in this new habitat.
For each character I cut out several stencils,
carefully working out a sequence of stencils to give a
really rich image. Once the stencils are finally ready,
the magic begins. I place each stencil in turn on the
canvas, and spray-paint through it. The picture
gradually emerges as I add layers of spray paint in
different colours. A day in the Life of ...I moved from London to the country about ten years ago and I live
and work in an old farmhouse, where I have built a shed for
spray-painting. I love its rough, rustic character. It's a great place
for messy jobs, and gives me the freedom to explore.
I work very intensely, and when I am painting I often work far into
the night to finish a piece. Then I like to put the finished piece in
my studio and keep looking at it from time to time to see if I want to
make any changes.
To relax, I like to sip Chinese green tea, play table tennis or just go for a walk in the beautiful Wye Valley near my home. |