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Artworks
Ming Zhou Chinese Canadian, 1961-2006
Bare Trees, Toronto, 2005watercolour on paper
protected by museum glass14.5 x 21 insigned bottom rightCurrency:Further images
Ming Zhou’s Bare Trees, Toronto captures the city in winter through a loose, atmospheric veil of colour and line. Leafless branches sweep across the composition like calligraphy, cutting through softened...Ming Zhou’s Bare Trees, Toronto captures the city in winter through a loose, atmospheric veil of colour and line. Leafless branches sweep across the composition like calligraphy, cutting through softened façades, storefronts, and passing cars. The urban scene feels glimpsed rather than precisely mapped, as though seen through cold air, memory, or motion.
Zhou uses fluid watercolour washes and dark linear accents to balance structure with spontaneity. Warm oranges, rusts, and pinks glow against cool greys, blues, and whites, suggesting a city made lively by reflected light even in the depths of winter. The bare trees dominate the picture surface, turning an ordinary street into a rhythmic web of verticals and diagonals.
What gives the painting its character is the contrast between the bustle of Toronto and the quiet poetry of the season. Ming Zhou’s Bare Trees, Toronto is less about exact topography than about mood, capturing the fleeting beauty of a snow-covered city softened by light, weather, and movement.
Provenance
- direct from artist estate