du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
Chinese artist Du Kun's "Revels of the Rock Gods" series features intricate depictions of Chinese rock stars as mountain temples.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
Each massive oil painting features a modern-day Chinese music idol -- but replaces hair with images of waterfalls, noses with Buddhist deities, and necks with traditional worship halls.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
He created the series as commentary on the clash between traditional Chinese values and modern western ideas.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
It is inspired by his own generation -- one that is influenced by traditional Buddhist and Confucius values, but also incorporates modern art and global influences.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
He chose to depict this juxtaposition using Chinese rock stars because he himself is a fan of their music. "The stars are perfect icons of [this] rebellious culture."
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
Du says it's important to him to draw on his Chinese identity in his work.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
"We live in a transformative era in China" Du says.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
He profiles nine different Chinese musicians. They are not necessarily household names, but they are his favorites.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
His favorite is Zuoxiao Zuzhou, pictured here.
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
The work takes cues from traditional Chinese landscape paintings, some of which date as far back as as the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279).
du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery
"Revels of the Rock Gods" is currently shown at an exhibition at the Mizuma Art Gallery in Tokyo.

Story highlights

Artist portrays Chinese rocks stars as colossal mountain temples

Hair is made of cascading waterfalls, noses of Buddhist deities and necks as worship halls

Du Kun says the series is a reflection of his generation's worldview

Beijing CNN  — 

Artist Du Kun juxtaposes traditional Chinese values and modern western ideas in his massive oil paintings, which depict Chinese rock stars embedded in traditional mountaintop temples. Hair is painted as cascading waterfalls, verdant tree canopies and gnarled roots, while noses are Buddhist deities, and necks are elaborately detailed worship halls.

Du’s work recalls traditional Chinese landscape paintings that dates back to the Southern Song Dynasty (1127-1279). The images are also reminiscent of the hallucinatory portraits of Italian renaissance artist Giuseppe Arcimboldo.

Evocatively titled “Revels of the Rock Gods,” Du’s 2-meter (6.5 ft) high portraits are now being exhibited at the Mizuma Art Gallery in Tokyo this month.

Du says the series is a reflection of his generation’s worldview.

“Those of us born in the 1980s were heavily influenced by traditional Buddhist or Confucian values, but also grew up with the great impact of western ideas. We live in a great transformative era in China.”

Temples and hipsters

The first time Du sketched a rock star as a mountaintop, he was on a train trip back to his hometown in southwestern China’s Sichuan province for the Lunar New Year holiday in 2013.

“I was intrigued by the idea of contrasting the elements from the traditional Chinese architectural temples and today’s young hipsters.”

“Then I thought, why don’t I portray rock stars since I’m such a big fan of rock music? The stars themselves are perfect icons of the rebellious culture, who draw even more drastic contrast to traditional Chinese architecture.”

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Over the past two years, Du has profiled nine Chinese musicians, whom he calls the stars of his generation, interlacing them with Buddhist and Taoist temples from across China.

du kun via Mizuma Art Gallery

“I tried to express the idea of freedom, democracy, critical thinking and courage of overthrowing the past through the rock singers.”

Many of the rock stars Du chose to profile aren’t necessarily household names in China, let alone outside the country.

His favorite is Zuoxiao Zuzhou, whose music Du describes as “extremely quirky and versatile.”

He’s portrayed with his signature Fedora hat, which is constructed from billowing smoke, while his outfit dissolves into cascading waterfalls.

du kun
Zuoxiao Zuzhou is Du Kun's favourite musician.

Du says it’s important to him to draw on his Chinese identity in his work.

“I had always imitated western modern art. My work wasn’t identifiable – you couldn’t tell where the the artist was from.”

“But gradually I realized that I needed to create something with Chinese characteristics.”