Wu Zuoren
{{Short description|Chinese painter}}
{{Infobox artist
|name = Wu Zuoren
吴作人
|image = Wu_Zuoren_Portrait.jpg
|caption = Wu Zuoren in his garden
Photo by Sally Larsen
Taken in 1988 at Beijing
|birth_date = {{birth date|1908|11|03|df=y}}
|birth_place = Suzhou, Jiangsu, Qing dynasty
|death_date = {{death date and age|1997|04|09|1908|11|03|df=yes}}
|field = Painting, Drawing, Calligraphy, Engraving
|training = Shanghai Art University
National Central University
Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts, Brussels
}}
{{family name hatnote|Wu|lang=Chinese}}
Wu Zuoren ({{zh|c=吴作人|p=Wú Zuòrén|w=Wu Tso-jen}}; 3 November 1908 – 9 April 1997)Barnhart, R. M. et al. (1997). Three thousand years of Chinese painting. New Haven, Yale University Press. {{ISBN|0-300-07013-6}}: Page 384. was a Chinese painter. A native of Jing County, Anhui, he was born in Suzhou, Jiangsu Province. He practiced both traditional Chinese ink painting and European oil painting.
Chronology<ref>Ville de Paris, ''Wou Tso-Jen ou la modernité dans la tradition de l'encre / Siao Chou-Fang et les fleurs de Chine'', Musée Cernuschi, 1987 {{ISBN|2-905197-09-9}}</ref>
- 1908: Wu Zuoren is born in Suzhou, Jiangsu, Qing dynasty.
- 1927: Wu Zuoren studies in the department of fine arts at Shanghai Art University where his ability is recognized by Xu Beihong. Later, he transfers to the department of fine arts at Nanguo Academy of Arts.
- 1928: Wu Zuoren follows Xu Beihong to study at the National Central University (renamed Nanjing University in 1949).
- 1930 - 1935: Wu Zuoren travels abroad to study in Europe. He returns to China in 1935.[http://www.china.org.cn/english/culture/80342.htm Wu Zuoren's Art Show Lauded in Paris] china.org.cn
- 1939: Wu Zuoren's first wife, Lina, a Belgian national, dies at an early age while they are at Nanjing University, due to postpartum depression complicated by the bombardment of Chongqing by Japanese war planes.
- 1949: With the establishment of the People's Republic of China, Wu Zuoren joins the China Artists Association.
- 1949-1953: Wu Zuoren becomes a professor and the first provost of China Central Academy of Fine Arts.
- 1953: Wu Zuoren is elected vice president of the China Artists Association.
- 1954: Wu Zuoren becomes a permanent member of the National People's Congress.
- 1958: Wu Zuoren becomes the principal of the China Central Academy of Fine Arts.
- 1963: Wu Zuoren sets out to change the face of China when presented with the opportunity to design a three postage stamps for the People's Republic of China. Known for his ink paintings of yaks and camels in western ChinaRobert Hatfield Ellsworth, Later Chinese Painting and Calligraphy 1800-1950 with C.Y. Watt, Random House, New York, 1987, vol II p. 327-329, {{ISBN|0-394-55463-9}} Wu Zuoren's Giant Panda stamps first issued in 1963 establish the giant panda as the emblem of the new China. A second series of six Giant Panda stamps by Wu Zouren was issued in 1973, and a more elaborate Giant Panda edition based on his ink paintings produced in 1985.
For the remainder of his life, Wu Zuoren remains a prominent member of the central committee of the China Democratic League, Chairman of the Chinese Artists Association, and a member of the standing committee of the National People's Congress. Wu Zuoren's second wife, Xiao Shufang, was an artist known for her flower paintings. Wu Zuoren founded and endowed the "[http://www.wuzuoren.org/ Wu Zuoren International Foundation of Fine Arts]".
- 1997: Wu Zuoren died in 1997 in Beijing.
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.wuzuoren.org/ Official website of Wu Zuoren International Foundation of Fine Arts]
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Category:20th-century Chinese painters
Category:Members of the Standing Committee of the 6th National People's Congress
Category:Academic staff of the Central Academy of Fine Arts
Category:Politicians from Suzhou
Category:People's Republic of China politicians from Jiangsu
Category:Presidents of Central Academy of Fine Arts