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  2. Bird-and-flower painting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird-and-flower_painting

    Bird-and-flower painting by Cai Han and Jin Xiaozhu, c. 17th century.. The huaniaohua is proper of 10th century China; and the most representative artists of this period are Huang Quan (哳㥳) (c. 900 – 965), who was an imperial painter for many years, and Xu Xi (徐熙) (937–975), who came from a prominent family but had never entered into officialdom.

  3. Sō Shiseki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sō_Shiseki

    Sō Shiseki. "Flowers and Birds in the Snow" 1765. Hanging scroll; color on silk. Kobe City Museum. Sō Shiseki (宋 紫石, 1715 – 9 April 1786 [1]) was a Japanese painter of the Nagasaki and Nanpin schools . Originally from Edo, he spent some time in Nagasaki, where he studied under the Chinese painter Song Ziyan, who was known as Sō ...

  4. Yun Shouping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yun_Shouping

    The mogu bird-and-flower motif experienced a resurgence through Yun Shouping's works and school of art. [2] Yun Shouping was initially a landscape painter, but he was reportedly so impressed by the works of the artist Wang Hui that he abandoned his training in favor of flower, animal, and insect paintings. [1]

  5. Huang Quan (painter) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huang_Quan_(painter)

    Hanyu Pinyin. Huáng Yàoshū. Huang Quan (903–965), courtesy name Yaoshu, was a Chinese painter during the Five Dynasties period and the Song dynasty who worked in the imperial painting academies of the Former Shu, Later Shu and Song dynasties. Along with Xu Xi, Huang is considered a founding master of the bird-and-flower painting .

  6. Sesshū Tōyō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sesshū_Tōyō

    To create his monochrome paintings in diluted greys and black ink, Sesshū used black sumi, meaning charcoal or soot-based solid ink on paper or silk, thus following the art of sumi-e [8] Some of Sesshū's most acclaimed works include Winter Landscape (c. 1470s), Four Landscape Scrolls of the Seasons (c. 1420 – 1506) and, Birds and Flowers (c ...

  7. Mogu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mogu

    During the period of the Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period, a painter named Huang Quan (黄筌) from Former Shu significantly developed the techniques in bird-and-flower painting, especially in painting trees and flowers, and his painting was called as the fine-sounding name Mogu Huazhi (沒骨花枝). [citation needed]

  8. Yun Bing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yun_Bing

    Hanyu Pinyin. Qīngyū. Wade–Giles. Ch'ing-yü. Yun Bing ( Chinese: 惲冰, dates unknown), courtesy names Qingyu ( Chinese: 清於) and Haoru ( Chinese: 浩如 ), was a Chinese painter during the Qianlong era. She is well known for her bird-and-flower paintings executing the "boneless" technique, and became the most famed of the Yun family's ...

  9. Ohara Koson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ohara_Koson

    Ohara Koson (also Ohara Hōson, Ohara Shōson) (Kanazawa 1877 – Tokyo 1945) was a Japanese painter and woodblock print designer of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, at the forefront of shinsaku-hanga and shin-hanga art movements. [1] Ohara Koson was famous as a master of kachō-e (bird-and-flower) designs. Throughout a prolific career ...