Dai Jin
Dai Jin, Back home in the spring evening, from the collection of the National Palace Museum in Taipei Dai Jin (Chinese: 戴 进; pinyin: Long Jìn, born 1388, died 1462) - Chinese painter of the Ming period. He was from Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province. For some time he was a court painter at the imperial court in Beijing, after one of his paintings was considered as a scandal, but he was dismissed around 1430 and returned to his hometown. He died in poverty and oblivion. He was only recognized posthumously, earning himself many followers in China and Japan.
It is considered a precursor of the so-called. Zhe school. He painted landscapes, creating panoramic scrolls related to the design of Ma-Xia school. His paintings, made with the technique of "broken ink", are characterized by expression and freedom of composition.
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