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}}

|death_place = Beijing, China

|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>

File:Three Stamps 1963.jpg

  • 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

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