Hong Yi, aka Red, is a talented young Chinese artist. A creative take on the art of Hong Yi

"The Malaysian artist Hong Yi is known throughout the world for her love of drawing, but she does not draw with brushes or pencils, because it's boring, but with everything in the world."

Coffee stain portrait

"Listening to a song by popular Taiwanese artist Jay Chou, 26-year-old Hong Yi drank her morning coffee. The song began with a line about a coffee cup lifted from a saucer, and continued with a story about traveling 20 years into the past. Accidentally placing the cup not on a saucer, but on white tablecloth, Hong Yi left a bright coffee mark on the white fabric.So the artist came up with the idea to paint a portrait of her favorite singer with the bottom of a coffee cup. original picture sepia color, which took about 12 hours to create."

Candle portrait

"About 1,500 blue candles and seven hours of work were spent by Hong Yi to create a portrait of the singer Adele. Under emotional composition"Set Fire to the Rain" oh lost love And broken heart the girl melted the wax, burning her fingers and hopelessly soiling her favorite pants.

Flower portrait

"And this time the artist did without brushes and slate pencils. The material for creating a portrait of a Burmese politician Aung San Suu Kyi was served with food coloring, 2,000 white carnations, and plastic cups. By mixing water and paint in various proportions, Hong Yi achieved different shades of fresh flowers."

Sock portrait

"Hong Yi used 750 pairs of socks to create a portrait of Chinese director Zhang Yimou. She spent over 3 weeks pinning black, white and gray socks together. The project was inspired by the old Chinese tradition of drying clothes on bamboo sticks attached to the windows in the lanes of houses. The artist found it very beautiful and worthy of use in art, and she used socks because they are small, inexpensive and easier to work with than, for example, T-shirts."

Picture painted with a basketball

"Using a basketball and some paint, an artist painted a portrait of famous Chinese basketball player Yao Ming in two hours."

31 days of creativity with food.

"The conditions that the artist herself came up with are simple: you can do whatever you want, but all the work must be done on a white plate and exclusively from food. I must say that photographs of food for Instagram not news, but what Hong Yi does is a real work of art! On her plates, without exaggeration, the whole world, with a variety of characters, plots and stories. People, animals, nature, feelings and even famous paintings found their new and unexpected interpretations. The project is not over yet, and you still have the opportunity to recharge your creativity and inspiration every day with the help of Hong Yi's photos."

"Dutch landscape" (chili, caramel)

"Louis Vuitton Monograms" (mushrooms)

"Circus" (eggshell)

"All You Need Is Love" (cherry tomatoes, caramel)

"Hello Richard Parker!" tiger from Life of Pi (carrot, white radish, prunes)

"Banksy" (nori, apple)

"Morning Garden" (oatmeal, chili, lemon)

"Three Little Pigs" (pasta, cookies, chili, dill, peanut butter)

"Three little pigs" (wolf - coal bread, piglets - beans)

"Three piglets"

"Owl" (red bow)

The Scream by Edvard Munch

Only the girl does not draw at all with a brush with paints.

Mark Zuckerberg "Facebook" Portrait


Her works are created from a wide variety of materials.

Hong Yi got two higher education: Graduated from the University of Architecture Melbourne and the Technical University of Delft in the Netherlands. She is currently working as an architect in Shanghai.

But she became known as an artist, thanks to her extraordinary work.

Candle portrait

About 1,500 blue candles and seven hours of work were spent by Hong Yui to create a portrait of the singer Adele. Under the emotional composition "Set Fire to the Rain" about lost love and a broken heart, the girl waxes, burning her fingers and hopelessly soiling her favorite pants.


Sock portrait.

This is a portrait of the famous Chinese director Zhang Yimou, born from hundreds of socks suspended from a bamboo stick.

The installation was assembled in an old Chinese alley.

"When I first came to Shanghai, I saw an old residential street and linen hanging out of the windows to dry on bamboo sticks, moving in the wind. I thought it was incredibly beautiful."

Flower portrait

And this time the artist did without brushes and leads. The material for creating a portrait of the Burmese politician Aung San Suu Kyi was food coloring, 2000 white carnations and plastic cups, into which she poured water with paint in various proportions, Hong Yi achieved a different shade of fresh flowers with this.

Aung San Suu Kyi Portrait with 2000 white flowers and Hong Yi red dye


Coffee stain portrait

While listening to a song by popular Taiwanese artist Jay Chou, 26-year-old Hong Yi drank her morning coffee. The song began with a line about a coffee cup being lifted from a saucer and continued with a story about traveling 20 years into the past. Inadvertently placing the cup not on the saucer, but on the white tablecloth, Hong Yi left a bright coffee mark on the white cloth. So the artist came up with the idea to paint a portrait of her favorite singer with the bottom of a coffee cup. The result was an original sepia color painting that took about 12 hours to complete.


Picture painted with a basketball

Using a basketball and paint, the artist painted a portrait of the famous Chinese basketball player Yao Ming in two hours.

Seed portrait

Sunflower seed portrait by Chinese conceptual artist Ai Weiweii.

food illustrations

For her food project, she uses every food imaginable, from fruits and vegetables to delicious cookies Oreo and desserts.

Almost every day, the artist creates and uploads new works to the network. The restrictions are simple - the image must consist entirely of food and only the background - a white plate. Following this framework, the girl managed to create landscapes, paintings with animals, references to pop culture, and even several illustrations for the Three Little Pigs fairy tale.

Artist of all sorts Young Chinese artist Hong Yi, also known as Red, has never picked up a brush to paint at least one of her paintings.

Artist of Anything Young Chinese artist Hong Yi (Hong Yi), also known as Red, has never picked up a brush to draw at least one of her paintings. Hong uses the most unexpected materials to create portraits and illustrations - from decorative cosmetics to sunflower seeds.

portraits

Portrait of a favorite singer from the traces of a coffee cup

While listening to a song by popular Taiwanese artist Jay Chou, Hong Yi drank her morning coffee. The song began with a line about a coffee cup being lifted from a saucer and continued with a story about traveling 20 years into the past. Inadvertently placing the cup not on the saucer, but on the white tablecloth, Hong left a bright coffee mark on the white cloth. So the artist came up with the idea to paint a portrait of her favorite singer with the bottom of a coffee cup.



Chinese director Zhang Yimou made of socks

The idea of ​​a sock portrait was born spontaneously: “When I first came to Shanghai, I saw an old residential street and linen hung out of the windows on bamboo sticks to dry, moving in the wind. I thought it was incredibly beautiful.” The artist spent 3 weeks pinning 750 pairs of black, gray and white socks together.



Mark Zuckerberg from books


Having visited the USA for the first time, Hong Yi was very impressed, and she really wanted to portray some famous American. When she turned to her friends on Facebook for advice, she suddenly realized that the owner of this social network should become the hero of her new work.



The paper Zuckerberg took 36 books and 7 days of work.

Singer Adele from melted candles


About 1,500 blue candles and seven hours of work were spent by Hong Yi to create a portrait of the singer Adele. Under the emotional composition Set Fire to the Rain about lost love and a broken heart, the girl melted wax, burning her fingers and hopelessly soiling her favorite pants.



Sunflower seed portrait by Chinese conceptual artist Ai Weiweii

The choice for seeds was not accidental. In 2010, Ai Weiwei littered the floor of London's Tate Modern Turbine Room with 100 million sunflower seeds, which were hand-painted and made from porcelain. For her portrait, Hong Yi used ordinary sunflower seeds, which she counted before “drawing”. It took exactly 100,000 seeds to create the short-lived painting.



Portrait of Burmese politician Aung San Suu Kyi from carnations


For flower painting Red used 2,000 plastic cups, which she filled with water and various concentrations of dye. The white carnations put into the cups had only to absorb the paint, and after a while the portrait “appeared”.


Picture painted with a basketball


Using a basketball and paint, the artist painted a portrait of the famous Chinese basketball player Yao Ming in two hours.


Pens and printer


Using 1,500 A4 sheets, Red scanned the pens, each time transferring them to new drawing. Then all the patterns were printed and glued in a certain way, which amounted to several long ribbons. Hong attached them to the crossbar. When everything was ready, a huge dove appeared before the audience. This project was called "Feathers".



Hong Yi, nicknamed Red, never ceases to amaze the world with new works and new materials used. Anything can act as a brush and paints. It can be: vegetables and fruits, traces of coffee cups, sunflower seeds, a basketball, specially tinted nails, wax and candles, sticks and flowers, etc.

From the series of works "31 DAYS OF FOOD CREATIVITY"

Red Hong Yi says he wants to keep using mundane, simple and often overlooked objects to make beautiful art and through that art and the internet, connect people all over the world. She says the cities and chaos "inspired her to start creating art using local materials."


From a series of works: "Birds made of flowers" ("Birds made of flowers")

There are a lot of articles on the Internet that talk about it, but, unfortunately, very often, even on reputable sites, numerous mistakes are made. Therefore, we decided to publish Hong Yi's biography and talk about it based primarily on her personal website http://www.redhongyi.com/


Portrait bright Aung San Suu Kyi

First of all, why did she get such a nickname - Red. It is erroneously believed that she received this nickname because she is a resident of China, and China is associated with red. This is wrong. Creative alias Red was given to her (and she didn’t take it for herself) because her name sounds like the word “red”, tangerine.


Adele Made Of Melted Candles

Secondly, they are often mistaken in reporting her origin and nationality. As Hong Yi tells in the times of " cultural revolution» her grandparents and father left Shanghai (China) and moved to Malaysia, where Hong Yi was born and lived. She heard a lot about China, but did not even think that someday she would go to China and work there.


"Jackie Chan stick portrait" (see video below)

But it so happened that after graduating from university in Australia, she accepted a job offer at the Australian architectural firm HASSELL (in their office in Shanghai). Another mistake that is often made on Russian sites is that she is still working at HASSELL. In fact, Hong Yi currently runs his own design studio and lives and works between Shanghai and Malaysia.


"Traces" from cups of coffee

Hong Yi is a very famous artist. Her work has been featured in many media including the Huffington Post, Wall Street Journal, ABC, CNN, NBC and the Daily Mail. She has worked with clients such as Hewlett Packard, Unilever, Nespresso, AT&T, BBDO, Mercedes Benz, Esquire and Astro. She has been invited to host the 6th and 7th EG Conferences in Monterey, California, TEDxkl 2013 in Kuala Lumpur, the APEC Young Entrepreneur Summit 2013 in Beijing, and has lectured at design universities Domus Academy and NABA ( Milan, Italy).


AI WEIWEI WITH SUNFLOWER SEEDS (from 7 kg sunflower seeds)

Red Hong Yi was named Esquire Magazine's '12 Brilliant Malaysians' of 2013, and given the Hong Kong Global Outlook 2013 '40 Under 40 Designers Award.

Tariq man (meaning "pulled tea" in Malay) - made from 20,000 tea bags
Basketball footprint portrait Open Your Eyes (20,000 seeds)
From the series Dinner for three
From the series "Birds made of flowers"

VIDEO: Jackie Chan chopsticks portrait by REDhongyi


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