Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - University ranking - The History of Famous Paintings of Western Hills in Ming Dynasty
The History of Famous Paintings of Western Hills in Ming Dynasty
The Book of Fishing in the Western Hills was painted by Yuan, a good friend when he was a teenager, after Yongle went to Beijing for the second time in the Ming Dynasty (14 12), and was later hidden by his good friend Li Shixian. In the sixth year of Hongzhi in Ming Dynasty (1493), Wu Kuan wrote an inscription for this volume. Because the picture scroll is an original of Wang Bi, it was hidden by the imperial palace after entering the Qing Dynasty. In the Ming Dynasty, monks of Song Ting Temple in Huishan, Wuxi used bamboo stoves to make tea. Wang Yi and others once drew four volumes of Bamboo Furnace Map for him, which was stored in the Buddhist temple and later defiled by monks. In the forty-fourth year of Qianlong, Qiu Lian, the magistrate of Wuxi, took the painting to the county government for reassembly. Unfortunately, the residents in the west of the office caught fire and the surrounding area was burned down. The following year, Emperor Qianlong ordered the Crown Prince and Hongyun to add four pieces, and at the same time ordered Wang Baoci, the original work of Shiqu, to Huishan Bamboo Furnace to revive the old concept. The emperor and his ministers wrote poems on it. During Qianlong's southern tour, he visited Huishan Bamboo Furnace Building six times and won the plaque of "Bamboo Furnace Building". In the tenth year of Xianfeng, the Taiping Army captured Wuxi, the bamboo stove was destroyed, and the "Xishan Fishing Hidden Scroll" was also lost. In the third year of Tongzhi, Qin Kunye got the map in Shanghai, when the bamboo stove house was in ruins. In the early years of Guangxu, Huo Qiupei and Qian Bo won the Hidden Map of Fishing in the Western Hills. Wang Bi's "Fishing Map in the Western Hills" has been circulated to this day, and collectors all lament that it is a rare treasure with priceless value.