MLitt Fine Art Practice School of Fine Art

Shuyu Ding

Acrylic and oil on canvas 200 x 200cm

In Angel’s Fracture, painted on June, 2025, I layered transparent gesso over gray linen, its exposed fibers echoing Bernini’s broken-winged angel model at the Vatican—its eternal gesture persists despite ruin, mirroring our rehearsed digital smiles losing authentic weight. Rejecting framed canvases, I embrace raw, hand-cut linen, a protest akin to Bacon’s ruptured spaces where material narrates more than image. Ochre torsos, cobalt blues, and cadmium reds collide, inspired by Rothko’s emotional deconstruction, while wing-like tears in titanium white and ultramarine, per Bacon, preserve struggle’s vitality. Imperfection here defies wholeness, offering freedom in stray strokes over algorithmic perfection.

Contact
785669240@qq.com
S.Ding1@student.gsa.ac.uk
Works
Broken Wings: Soaring Through Imperfection
Rescuing Pony: Anatomy of Survival
The Blade of Redemption in Europa
Renaissance au Clair de Lune
Glasgow Dusk
When the World Blossomed in My Eyes
Between Wind and Dream
Coiled Realms
Cat Driving a Bumper Car
Acrylic and oil on canvas 200 x 200cm

Broken Wings: Soaring Through Imperfection

As I brushed transparent gesso over the gray base of the linen, the exposed fibers reminded me of the preparatory model of an angel that Bernini and his assistants created for St. Peter’s Basilica at the Vatican Museums—the angel’s wings are now broken, yet within its unfinished steel frame remains the eternal gesture of beating. Perhaps this is the metaphor of the contemporary moment: we constantly rehearse smiles within algorithm-woven perfect filters, yet lose the weight of our feathers in the shadows of the digital realm.

Broken Wings: Soaring Through Imperfection

Acrylic ,oil color 200x200cm

Rescuing Pony: Anatomy of Survival

Rescuing Pony: Anatomy of Survival

Oil painting, Acrylic

100x170cm

“Rescuing Pony: Anatomy of Survival” confronts the brutal reality of Pony, a Bornean orangutan subjected to years of systemic sexual exploitation. Rather than aestheticizing suffering, the work presents survival through fractured, surging visual language. Oceanic blues, inspired by the Mayan “Blue Monkey” totem, swirl around her abstracted form, evoking both purification and drowning, while yellow and green suggest food grasped by spectral claws. The brushwork recalls de Kooning and Cecily Brown—fragmented yet alive—transforming Pony beyond victimhood. Layered textures resemble sedimented memory, resisting closure and echoing the nonlinear cycles of trauma, where pain and vitality persist in fragile coexistence.

Rescuing Pony: Anatomy of Survival

The Blade of Redemption in Europa

“The Blade of Redemption in Europa” confronts the harrowing history of Pony, a female orangutan rescued in 2003 after years of systemic sexual exploitation—a stark emblem of human cruelty. In this work, I cast myself as a savior wielding a scythe, cutting through darkness to release her, while the perpetrators dissolve into monstrous forms within a misty forest. Somber gray-browns evoke captivity, disrupted by indigo and black arcs of violence and transformation. At the center, bright peach-pink flesh tones bloom as vitality and rebirth. Through forceful sweeps and delicate strokes, the painting embodies both rupture and healing, resilience and hope.

The Blade of Redemption in Europa

Oil painting, Acrylic 100x170cm

The Blade of Redemption in Europa

Draft 50×50cm

Renaissance au Clair de Lune

On a bone-chilling March night in 2025, I stood on the banks of the Seine, facing the fire-scarred Notre-Dame Cathedral for the first time. Its outer shell had been consumed by flames, leaving the steel skeleton bare, glinting cold silver beneath the crane’s work lights. Around me, friends lamented not being able to witness its pristine form. Yet I felt an uncommon serenity.

 

To me, Notre-Dame at this moment was at its most authentic—its wounds laid open, its structure exposed, its history breathing through the trauma. The French people and government were devoting immense effort to restoring it, and within the steel, dust, and shifting light, I saw not just the rebirth of a building, but a moment where time, beauty, and humanity converged.

Renaissance au Clair de Lune

Acrylic ,oil color 100x170cm

Cloudborne Blossoms

May 2025

Renaissance au Clair de Lune

small draft 50×50cm

Glasgow Dusk

Standing before Glasgow Dusk—my final work at the Glasgow School of Art—I see a milestone of growth and transformation. Completed for my 2025 graduation exhibition, it balances soft pinks, Naples yellow, and milky white against bold, angular strokes, reflecting both serenity and unrest. The coarse linen ground echoes Glasgow’s historic vitality, while a luminous yellow-white circle recalls a descending sun, resonating with regenerative ideas from Re/Design: Biomimicry. Surrounding washes of blue and teal evoke Helen Frankenthaler, while black and purple cuts suggest Anish Kapoor’s voids. Subtle pinks and corals, inspired by Julie Mehretu, bloom with fragile resilience and hope.

Glasgow Dusk

Acrylic ,oil color 100x170cm

When the World Blossomed in My Eyes

My use of color is guided by intuition: off-white and pale pink form a soft base, evoking dawn or dusk, while black lines and patches inject tension as symbols of authority or chaos. Accents of blue and red burst with vitality, and green hints at the natural world, reinforcing themes of empathy. Brushwork shifts between forceful black strokes recalling Pollock and softer washes echoing Frankenthaler, with splashes of red and blue resonating with Cecily Brown’s passion. The asymmetrical composition, storm-like in its density, recalls Julie Mehretu’s abstractions, while the raw linen ground rejects traditional boundaries, embracing openness and flux.

When the World Blossomed in My Eyes

Acrylic ,oil color 160x100cm

Between Wind and Dream

Created in May 2025, this fully finished canvas was inspired by a Jellycat unicorn plush gifted by a close friend. As a Sagittarius, I connect deeply with the unicorn’s symbolism of freedom, purity, and imagination. In earlier works, it appeared as a spiritual refuge; later, it evolved into Pegasus, embodying unrestrained flight and liberation. This painting extends that trajectory while engaging with female artists’ explorations of myth, bodily freedom, and transcendence. Its turquoise body glows within halos of yellow and white, while swift brushstrokes animate the mane—gestures recalling Joan Mitchell’s expressive energy and embrace of chance.

Between Wind and Dream

Acrylic 60x70cm

Coiled Realms

Coiled Realms (2025) was inspired by a serendipitous encounter with a female sculpture by the River Lagan in Belfast, whose circular ring evoked both cosmic cycles and the sea goddess Mazu. Translating this into paint, I worked with gestural sweeps of aqua and lake blue, echoing river currents and sacred femininity, layered with bursts of lime, coral pink, and sharp black to create tension. A lavender ground builds atmospheric space, recalling Amy Sillman, while fragmented vertical strokes suggest a goddess-like body. Influenced by Joan Mitchell and Cecily Brown, the painting embodies metamorphosis, where intuition, energy, and abstraction converge.

Coiled Realms

Acrylic ,oil color 78x200cm

Cat Driving a Bumper Car

Cat Driving a Bumper Car

Acrylic ,oil color 140x100cm

Amethyst Embraced by Wisteria

Acrylic ,oil color 68x81cm

Looking in a Mirror Inside a Cave

Acrylic ,oil color 78x100cm

Echoes of the Moon Rabbit

Acrylic ,oil color 75x60cm