One of China’s top ten enduring masterpieces—a brilliant exemplar of the exquisite “blue-green landscape painting” technique.
Gathering the essence of Chinese calligraphy and painting art, showcasing the most representative works of calligraphy and painting. It delves deeply into the unique charm of traditional Chinese culture.
We carefully select rare manuscripts of extremely high artistic value and cultural significance, ensuring both quality and depth, blending visual beauty with cultural richness.
Offering ultra-high-resolution digital files for download, which can be used for print Wall Art, Frame TV Art, Desktop Wallpaper. Let the beauty of art seamlessly integrate into your daily life.
Wang Xizhi – Calligraphers of the Eastern Jin Dynasty
Chrysanthemums bloom in abundance, while slanting wind and drizzle animate the scene.
This world-famous masterpiece of social customs painting of the Northern Song Dynasty has spawned countless copies, imitations, different versions and re-creations. Among them, Ming Dynasty’s Qiu Ying’s “Along the River During the Qingming Festival” is the most famous.
Each album contains ten pieces of ancient porcelain (mostly works from the Song and Ming dynasties) selected by Emperor Qianlong. They were all drawn to facilitate Emperor Qianlong of the Qing Dynasty to appreciate the porcelain in the paintings.
The Ten Masters Album distills the Yuan literati’s cosmic vision into palm-sized leaves. As Huang Gongwang proclaimed, “Painting is the imprint of the mind.”
As the art critic Wang Bonin noted, “This mural’s true value lies in its power to transcend time—a celestial parliament that speaks equally to the 14th-century pilgrim and the 21st-century viewer”.
Despite earthly glory, she follows the bodhisattva with humble reverence, her clasped hands and downward gaze embodying the Tang elite’s pursuit of spiritual liberation beyond mortal splendor.
The scroll’s spatial composition (bubai 布白) transcends mere aesthetics, becoming a cartography of the poet’s psyche—where ink and void converse like lamentations and silences.
“Flower-Signal Wind” refers to the seasonal breeze that brings the message of blooming flowers. According to the traditional Chinese calendar, the period from Lesser Cold to Grain Rain comprises eight solar terms over four months. For each segment, a flower that most accurately embodies its blooming season is chosen to symbolize the “Flower-Signal Wind.
The bulls are portrayed with robust, muscular forms and a palpable vitality, evoking an impression of raw power that seems capable of overwhelming multitudes.