免费av毛片,日韩av高清在线播放,97国产精品最好的产品,欧美成人免费一区二区三区,神马午夜一区,曰河南少妇对白视频,欧美自拍视频

US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Culture

Nature's visionary artist

By Lin Qi ( China Daily ) Updated: 2015-04-21 08:06:20

Nature's visionary artist

Southern Bank of Lianjiang River, a mountain-and-water painting by Huang Binhong.[Photo provided to China Daily]

Huang Binhong's work is baffling to many, but the painter continues to inspire generations of artists 60 years after his death, Lin Qi reports.

Huang Binhong's landscape style is affectionately called "a lump of thick, dark ink", but his paintings do feature a variety of colors.

Huang (1865-1955) was part of a generation of artists who modernized traditional brushwork by applying gorgeous colors and choosing uplifting subjects. Huang, however, dedicated himself to perfecting shading. He used layers of ink blocks to present the great beauty of nature.

Huang was not anxious for recognition. He spent decades researching Chinese old masters' works. He achieved artistic maturity in his 80s. He once said: "People will not acknowledge my paintings until 50 years after my death".

The National Art Museum of China is showing its collection of Huang's mountain-and-water (shanshui) paintings. The exhibition commemorates the 150th year of Huang's birth.

The exhibition includes two albums of Huang's drawings on loan from a private collection overseas. It is the first time either album has been on public view. One contains Huang's initial sketches, offering a glimpse of the logic his brushwork follows-from which point he started and how he arranged the lines.

The other depicts Huang's 70 copies of old masters' works, and reveals how he built up his own system of the shanshui genre. A highlight is the juxtaposition of Huang's copy and the original caoshu (cursive script) scroll, Poem on Wangwushan Mountain by Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) calligrapher Wang Duo.

Previous Page 1 2 3 Next Page

 
Editor's Picks
Hot words

Most Popular
 
...