This "shrimp" is a bit magical. East West Question · Sino foreign Dialogue | Foreigners Falling in Love with Chinese Ink Painting Brush | China | Ink Painting
When it comes to Mr. Qi Baishi's shrimp, many people are familiar with it. As a representative of Chinese ink painting, the painting "Ink Shrimp" uses only a few strokes to make the lively and lively image of the shrimp appear on paper, making it unforgettable.
Today, with the deepening of cultural exchanges between China and foreign countries, Chinese traditional painting has also gone abroad, gaining recognition and love from a group of foreigners, and constantly expanding its connotation through cultural collisions. How is the dissemination of traditional Chinese painting overseas? What opportunities and bottlenecks have you encountered? How can the spirit of traditional Chinese painting survive and develop in the new era?
Regarding the above issues, China News Agency invited Wu Hongliang, Dean of Beijing Academy of Painting, and Cui Changyuan, Director of the Institute of Chinese Culture and Art at Qingyun University in South Korea and President of the Korean Chinese Language and Literature Research Association, to observe and engage in dialogue through the paintings of Chinese painting master Qi Baishi.