One of my early watercolour paintings |
1. I inherited my aptitude for art from my mother. She had a talent for drawing portraits using colour pencils. We were told that as a young girl she would model some clay into beautiful tiny animals such as a goose, a hen, a goat or a buffalo.
2. I did not pursue a career in art. However, I was destined to become an art teacher. I was very enthusiastic at the beginning of my career. Occasionally, I would take a group of students on weekends for outings in the country where we enjoyed painting the scenery.
4. During my secondary school days I became my art teacher’s pet. I remember painting a view of the paddy fields on a piece of large hardboard using powder tempera paint. I was proud when it hung on the wall of one of the classrooms.
5. Later my art teacher was transferred to another school and a new art teacher replaced him. The new art teacher had asked me to paint a mural on one of the walls of a classroom building but I refused. I still recall what he told me then, “You’re wasting your talent.”
6. With regard to talent, the year 1975 was a very memorable year during which I was in my element and put my talent to use by producing creative works. That year I was selected to attend a one-year course in art education at the Specialist Teacher Training Institute (STTI) in Cheras.
7. Five out of 19 in our group were my college mates of 1968. It had been six years since we met, so it was like a reunion for us. The other course participants were also very friendly and helpful. Everyone seemed enthusiastic and hard-working. That gave me the motivation to do my best.
STTI, Cheras, 1975 |
8. One night I went to the classroom-cum-studio with a few friends to do our own thing. I began executing a large semi-abstract painting based on my studies of the coconut palm. I stayed up all night painting the canvas with brushes laden with acrylic. Eventually in the early hours my canvas manifested itself in a unified form of colour, shape, line and texture.
9. I was late for the morning class the next
day. My close friend told me that Mr. Yeoh Jin Leng was pleased with my
painting and he commented something like: ‘This fellow is really a colourist.
He would become an artist one day.’
An illustration from my unpublished children book |
An illustration from my children book Merak dan Bangau (Peacock and Heron) |
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