A commemorative exhibition in memory of Michael Sullivan, leading scholar of Chinese art.
Lotus is one of Zhang Daqian’s (1899-1983) favourite subjects. He believed that what matters in Chinese painting is the skill of using brush and ink and ‘painting lotus shows one’s basic skills’. Zhang applied various accomplished skills in his lotus paintings, such as the fine brushwork gongbi style, the expressive xieyi style, the mogu ‘boneless’ style, and the use of gold, powder, and colour.
This handscroll, however, is a simple ink painting with playful brushwork that he produced for his old friends Khoan (1919-2003) and Michael Sullivan (1916-2013), after he returned and settled in Taiwan. The inscription reads ‘My friends Michael Sullivan and Madam Wu Khoan ardently love my expressionist painting on small scrolls. I left America and returned to Taiwan recently and I met them there. I have been ill, but I drop the brush on the page and try to doodle. My work is not even worth a laugh.'
Sullivan, Michael, Modern Chinese Art: The Khoan and Michael Sullivan Collection, revised edn (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2009), no. 149 on p. 152, illus. p. 152 fig. II.149
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Objects from past exhibitions may have now returned to our stores or a lender. Click into an individual object record to confirm whether or not an object is currently on display. Our object location data is usually updated on a monthly basis, so please contact the Jameel Study Centre if you are planning to visit the museum to see a particular Eastern Art object.
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