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The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

The following articles are sourced from: Chinese Art

Bada Shanren painted lotus

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Eight mountain people Lotus kingfisher diagram

Bada Shanren (1626-1705), painter of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties, was a master of The Chinese painting generation.

The Bada Shanren are masters of using ink to create a realm. His works are usually expressive in a symbolic way, with exaggerated and peculiar images, majestic and timeless styles, and full of stubbornness. Pen and ink condensation and perseverance, to indulge in indulgence, whether large or small, there is a simple and smooth, bright and beautiful style. The Bada Shan people pushed China's ink painting freehand to the peak of art.

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!
The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Eight mountain people Lotus double birds

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Eight mountain people Mohe ghost birds

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Bada Shanren Mohe

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Eight mountain people Mizuki Qinghua

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Eight mountain people Lotus dragonflies

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Bada Shanren Mohe Lake Stone

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Bada Shanren Wild Lotus Qing fun

Shi Tao painted lotus

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Shi Tao Mohe

The ink is black in the clumps, and the flowers and leaves in the inky black bushes are wide. Try to see the pen pass through the smoke, and the waves do not have to be finished. --Shi Tao

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Shi Tao Lotus flower diagram

Shi Tao (1642-1708), together with Hongren, Jia Ren and Zhu Yun (Bada Shanren), was one of the few great figures in the history of Chinese painting.

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Shi Tao once said: "When writing books and paintings, no matter whether the ancestors learn later, they should win with their qi, and the spirit of the winner is brilliant, and it is out of the paper." Lazy is shallow and unfocused.

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Late Ming and early Qing dynasties Shi Tao Lotus

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Xu Wei painted lotus

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Ming Xu Wei Lotus Mandarin Duck

Xu Wei, qingteng, one of the three talents of the Ming Dynasty. His splashed ink freehand paintings of flowers and birds are all between similarity and dissimilarity. With his unique brushstrokes, Xu Wei created a large-scale freehand painting style of flowers and birds, which raised the traditional literati painting to a newer realm, and had a profound influence on Chinese painting in later generations.

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Ming Xu Wei Mo He

Whether it is the Eight Mountain People in the early Qing Dynasty, the "Eight Monsters of Yangzhou" in the early Qing Dynasty, Wu Changshuo in modern times, and Qi Baishi in modern times are all deeply affected by it.

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!
The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Ming Xu Wei Ink Flower Picture Scroll of Lotus

The three tall people paint the lotus, no one surpasses!

Ming Xu Wei Jia Huang Tu

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