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{{commonscat|Zhu Da}} | {{commonscat|Zhu Da}} | ||
==Issues of Connoisseurship and Authenticity== | |||
These are discussed in the context of a current collection published on the Internet. See "A Collection of Classical Chinese Paintings" | |||
==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
Revision as of 07:10, 11 February 2009
Bada Shanren (Chinese: 八大山人; Wade–Giles: Pata Shanjen; lit. 'Mountain Man of the Eight Greats', ca. 1626—1705) , born as Zhu Da (朱耷), was a Chinese painter of shuimohua and a calligrapher. He was of noble lineage, being a descendant of the Ming dynasty prince Zhu Quan.
A child prodigy, he began painting and writing poetry in his early childhood. About the year 1658, when the Ming emperor committed suicide and a rebel army attacked Beijing, the young man sought refuge in a Buddhist temple and became a monk. As a loyal subject of the Ming, he was heart broken and refused to speak to anyone: he only laughs and cries (as inscriptions in his paintings show). He was a leading painter of the Qing period.
His paintings feature sharp brush strokes which are attributed to the sideways manner by which he held his brush. In the 1930s, Chinese painter Zhang Daqian produced several forgeries of Bada Shanren's works. But, they are easily spotted by the trained eye, because the modern copies were softer and rounder. Yale University scholar, Wang Fangyu, was a major collector of Bada Shanren paintings from the 1960s until his death in 1997.
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- Two Birds
- Lotus and Birds (荷花小鸟图), Zhu Da, Shanghai Museum
- Mynah Bird on an Old Tree, Zhu Da, Palace Museum, Beijing
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Issues of Connoisseurship and Authenticity
These are discussed in the context of a current collection published on the Internet. See "A Collection of Classical Chinese Paintings"