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Former Residence of Qi Baishi (1863-1957), a well-known
Chinese artist, is located near the western entrance of
Picai Lane in the West City District.
Artists
and VIPs from all over the world converged at Qi Baishi’
s home in the seven or eight years before his death in1957.
Though the government had given him another house on the
east side, he preferred his own garden, full of the more
mundane crops, such as towel-gourd, peanuts, pumpkins,
grapes and morning glory. His famous works “Towel-Gourd
and a Bee,” “Grapes and a Dragonfly,”
are all taken from the yard on Picai Lane.
Qi Baishi’s son Qi Liangzhi remembers the following:
There was a time, when the Chinese Artists’ Association
was in a generous mood, that they arranged a quiet, comfortable
environment for my father in Yu’er Lane of the East
City District. Tastefully designed with red corridors,
flowering crabapples, and rockeries, it really was like
a small park. But he missed his own home, the trees and
flowers he had planted himself, and requested to move
back. Premier Zhou gave his assent and even accompanied
him home, staying awhile to chat with the family.
Qi Baishi, of Hunan Province, had traveled around the
country on his earlier years, selling paintings and carving
seals to make a living.
He settled down in Beijing at the age of 57, and gradually
his style of painting began to change. Combining traditional
freehand brushwork and folk art, he produced a unique
art form centering on flowers, birds, insects, and fish.
Simple and bold, each colorful painting was achieved with
only a few strokes. In his later years he focused on calligraphy
and seal carving and served in the early 1950s as chairman
of the Chinese Artists’ Association.
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