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Wu Wei (painter)

Chinese painter (1459–1508) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wu Wei (painter)
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Wu Wei (traditional Chinese: 吳偉; simplified Chinese: 吴伟; pinyin: Wú Wěi; ca. 14591508) was a painter of Ming dynasty (13681644) China famous for his landscapes.

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Wu Wei, Celebration at the Fishing Village

Wu was born in Wuchang in Hubei province.[1] His style names were Shiying and Ciweng, and his sobriquets were Lufu and Xiaoxian.[2]

Although he was born into a family of scholar-officials and might have pursued a career in the bureaucracy, Wu Wei instead chose to support himself as a painter. He worked as a professional painter in the city of Nanjing, and three emperors summoned him to work as a court painter in Beijing: the Chenghua emperor (r. 146587), the Hongzhi emperor (r. 14881505), and the Zhengde emperor (r. 150621).[3]

Wu Wei is known as a landscape painter, and, at least early in his career, he was inspired by the work of Dai Jin (13881462). He also painted figures.[3] Wu painted in a strong, fluent, and uninhibited style, and took on many students to teach.

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