Bamboo in Wind and Rain ca. 1694 Shitao (Zhu Ruoji) Chinese Shitao, one of the most outstanding landscape masters of his time, was also passionately in love with bamboo painting. On this monumental work, he quotes a description by Su Che (1039–1112) of Wen Tong (1018–1079), the Northern Song bamboo painter: "He dallies amid bamboo in the morning, stays in the company of bamboo in the evening, drinks and eats amid the bamboo, and rests andsleeps in the shade of bamboo; having observed all the different aspects of the bamboo, he then exhausts all the bamboo's many transformations." Accompanying
Bamboo in Wind and Rain ca. 1694 Shitao (Zhu Ruoji) Chinese Shitao, one of the most outstanding landscape masters of his time, was also passionately in love with bamboo painting. On this monumental work, he quotes a description by Su Che (1039–1112) of Wen Tong (1018–1079), the Northern Song bamboo painter: "He dallies amid bamboo in the morning, stays in the company of bamboo in the evening, drinks and eats amid the bamboo, and rests andsleeps in the shade of bamboo; having observed all the different aspects of the bamboo, he then exhausts all the bamboo's many transformations." Accompanying Shitao's signature is his seal, which quotes a saying by Wen Tong: "How can I live one day without this gentleman!" During the eighteenth,century, Shitao's style of bamboo painting was practiced by members of the Eight Eccentrics of Bamboo in Wind and Rain. Shitao (Zhu Ruoji) (Chinese, 1642–1707). China. ca. 1694. Hanging scroll; ink on paper. Qing dynasty (1644–1911). Paintings
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