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Brief introduction of Qian Shoutie's life
Qian Shoutie was born in the 23rd year of Guangxu in Qing Dynasty (1897). His early family was poor. At the age of twelve, he came from his hometown to be an apprentice in the library opened by Tang in Suzhou Hulong Street. Tang Dynasty was a famous sculptor in Suzhou, who was good at identifying and erecting monuments. Zheng He and Wu Changshuo often use stone tablets to designate a pool, so they know Zheng Wugong. After studying in Suzhou, he still lived in Suzhou, set up a lettering booth, studied hard after work, and was taught by Zheng as a disciple. Later, he studied the painter Yu and gave him six methods. Bo Tie claims that art is the biggest among the three personal influence. Zheng was named as a "thin iron official" because he was a thin iron. On October 9th, 2008, he moved to Shanghai, where most of them were poetry clubs. Bo Tie participated in the organization of epigraphy and calligraphy clubs such as maritime museum, and left them to Lu Lianfu, Wang Er, Huang and Wu Daiqiu, which was quite beneficial. As a result, he devoted himself to the art of painting and gradually became famous. He once presided over Hongye Painting and Calligraphy Society and Chinese Painting Society. 1922, the famous Japanese painter Guan Xue Hashimoto visited Shanghai, where he saw paintings made of thin iron and praised them as "the great hand of zhina". As soon as his paintings came out, overseas Chinese in Japan living in Shanghai flocked to them. 1923 March, at the invitation of Japanese art circles, he went to Japan for the first time to hold an art exhibition. Before he left, his teacher Yu Yutuo took his masterpiece to the East to enjoy it, which was also very popular and returned to Shanghai to report his life. However, Yu Yushui died, and his grief was inexplicable. Therefore, he will pass on the proceeds as a treasured seal forever. 1935 When he went to Japan again, his calligraphy and painting seal cutting became better and better, and he often published articles in bookstores and magazines founded by 1937 in Japan, which was highly praised by Japanese colleagues. And Mr. Guo Moruo and Mr. Jin Zutong are still very close.

It was that autumn that Japanese militarists launched the Lugouqiao Incident and invaded China crazily. Patriotic overseas Chinese living in Japan are sometimes persecuted. Bo Tie, Mr. Guo and Mr. Jin were deeply dissatisfied with what the Japanese authorities had done, and they returned to China through consultation and went to the national disaster together. Mr. Murray acted first, and Bo Tie raised money for it. In the early morning before he left, he hired a car to his house, put on his own suit, put Mr. Morrow in his pajamas, and quietly returned to China without giving up. It was detected by the Japanese police afterwards; In addition, Bo Tie has always condemned Japan's policy of aggression against China, and the police arrested him. Jin Zutong wrote Guo Moruo's Return to China-A Book under the pseudonym of Chen Yin (published by Words and Actions Publishing House 1945), which was mentioned quite a bit in the year of Thin Iron. After the Japanese police arrested Bo Tie and tried to force him to kneel, Bo Tie was furious and said, "This is not only insulting me, but actually insulting all the people of China." Assaulting Japanese police for holding a metal ashtray. When other Japanese policemen saw it, they all rushed to hit the thin iron until they fainted on the ground. He was sentenced to four years in prison for disturbing the peace and attempted murder. After he went to prison, he was treated by a Korean political prisoner who was proficient in medical skills and gave help from time to time. The painter Guan Xue Hashimoto also took part in the election. After the case was exposed in the newspaper, the Japanese with a sense of justice expressed sympathy for Bo Tie. Because of the benefits of his stage name, the number of people who asked him to seal his paintings and calligraphy was twice as much as before, and his income in prison was unexpected.

After he was released from prison, he was escorted to a boat by the Japanese police, saying that he was not allowed to set foot on Japanese soil again, about 194 1 June. Many people call it iron thin and unyielding. A friend sent a poem, including one sentence, "When you are in prison, you don't regret it, but you have to do it yourself." After returning to China, I didn't waste my pen and ink and lived in Lafayette Road (now Fuxing Middle Road). Under the Japanese puppet regime, his life was extremely poor and he often ate sweet potatoes, so he named his room "Yu Xiang Huan". After the victory of the Anti-Japanese War, I moved to Huangpu Road next to Waibaidu Bridge, and the studio faced the intersection of Huangpu River and Wusong River. Because of its name, its room is called "Songsong Building", also known as "Linjiang Guanri Building". Former Shanghai Academy of Fine Arts. 1950 returned to Shanghai via Hong Kong and made a short stop when passing through Hong Kong. That year, Shanghai New Chinese Painting Research Association was established and became a member. 65438-0956 China Painting Academy established in Shanghai. He was hired as a painter and served as a director of China Artists Association Shanghai Branch. 1957 was wrongly classified as a rightist in the Painting Academy. 196 1 Take off your hat. Suffering from emphysema in his later years, he was humiliated during the Cultural Revolution and was beaten by a fake spy. He was very ill and died of a heart attack.

His students include Liu Tianyi, a famous contemporary calligrapher, and Wang Dawen, a famous American painter.