dc.description.abstract | In the late Qing Dynasty, an emerging artistic force quickly developed and later became the famous Shanghai School. The group gathering plenty of painters near Shanghai area soon dominated the rapidly changing market with various styles of artworks. However, in such a changeable market, a group of Suzhou painters using the traditional and profound painting skills tried to retain the style of ”Orthodox School.” Lu Hui (陸恢, c. 1851-1920), a well-known painter from Suzhou, was considered as one of the greatest practitioners of ”Orthodox School” in Shanghai School.
This paper will focus on Lu Hui’s landscape paintings, his biography and the development of his painting styles. Lu Hui followed the epigrapher Wu Dachen (吳大澂, c. 1835-1902) and joined Wu’s bureaucracy in his earlier time. Leaving Wu’s system became an important turning point of Lu Hui’s life and art afterwards. Therefore, the first chapter will refer to contemporaneous books, paintings, annotations and even epitaphs to discuss Lu Hui’s social activities as well as his biography. The second chapter will focus on Lu’s early landscape paintings finished during the time in Wu Dachen’s bureaucracy and figure out how Lu Hui used Wu’s collections to improve his painting skills and establish his own style connecting with ”Orthodox School.” The third chapter will center around the time from 1897 to 1911 that Lu Hui moved to Shanghai to help another collector called Pang Laichen (龐萊臣, c. 1964-1949) and explore not only Lu Hui’s painting style but changes in his late year. Subsequently, this chapter will discuss Lu Hui’s experience of helping Pang Laichen make up his own collection catalogue, Xuzhai Minghua Lu《虛齋名畫錄》(A Record of the Xuzhai Collection, 16 volumes), and how this experience brought influence to Lu’s artworks eventually. At last, the influence of Lu Hui on later generations will be discussed as well.
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