In the 1980s, Michael Sullivan (1916-2013) visited China frequently and made many new friends among the younger artists who had emerged from the darkness of the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). On one visit, he met printmakers who were developing the shuiyin (water-based printing) technique into an expressive art form at the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou. This work, a fine example of the technique, was given to Michael by Lu Fang (born 1932), a teacher at the Academy. The inscription reads ‘For the respected Professor Michael Sullivan and Madam Wu Huan. Lu Fang in Hangzhou.’
Shuiyin print is a technique perfected early in the 17th century in southern Anhui province and Nanjing, Jiangsu province. The blocks are hand-coloured with watercolor and printed on multilayer sprayed paper to produce subtle gradations of tone and atmosphere, the aim being to create the effect of a painting. With the fall of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), the tradition in Nanjing declined and was not revived until the early 1960s, when the Jiangsu branch of the Chinese Artists Association held training sessions in the technique.
Sullivan, Michael, Modern Chinese Art: The Khoan and Michael Sullivan Collection, revised edn (Oxford: Ashmolean Museum, 2009), no. 33 on p. 186, illus. p. 187 fig. III. 33
shuiyin
Shuiyin is a water-soluble ink printed woodcut.
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