Latest News:  

English>>Life & Culture

Renowned painter donates collection to hometown gallery

By Wang Qian (China Daily)

09:13, April 26, 2013

An art gallery in Shandong recently acquired a wealth of paintings by Liu Kuo-Sung, a renowned painter who lives in Taiwan.

Opened at Shandong Provincial Museum on April 26, the gallery will permanently exhibit the masterpieces by the painter.

Known as "the father of modern ink painting", the 81-year-old donated a total of 81 masterpieces to the museum, creating the largest collection of his work in the world.



"I'm very glad that my work can be on display permanently at the largest museum of my hometown," said Liu, adding that another 19 pieces will be donated later.

An art fund worth 4 million yuan ($625,000) supported by Liu and the provincial government was launched at the same time to boost the development of modern ink painting.

【1】 【2】 【3】 【4】 【5】


We recommend:

Zhang Yuqi, Wang Quanan get married

Super kittens that make you laugh

Never-seen photos of Madonna on display

"Low-carbon fashion" show held in China

Hold on to the last tattoo of Li people

11 most creative elevators in the world

World's most precious diamonds

Cute baby and his little bulldogs

Angelababy poses for VOGUE magazine

Email|Print|Comments(Editor:DuMingming、Ye Xin)

Leave your comment0 comments

  1. Name

  

Selections for you


  1. Military high-techs used in quake rescue

  2. Qingdao destroyer open to visitors

  3. 22nd ASEAN Summit kicks off in Brunei

  4. Cool shades as summer is coming

  5. A migrant worker’s life after work in photos

  6. Preventing disease after the quake

  7. 'Qing Dynasty Queen' hosts sacrificial rites

  8. WAGs of snooker players

  9. Entrepreneurs see potential in market

  10. No new stimulus needed as economy remains stable

Most Popular

Opinions

  1. Urbanization to fuel China's economic growth
  2. Supervise, don't smear Red Cross
  3. Offering security protection for co-development
  4. Insisting on wrong road, Japan has no future
  5. US 'turns blind eye to human rights'
  6. Are cities expanding too fast and too soon?
  7. Homework, games limit kids' reading
  8. Commentary: Quake-hit China grows in pain
  9. Loan guidance is good for banks, report says
  10. IMF should act responsibly

What’s happening in China

Giant pandas safe in quake-hit zone

  1. Man used fake bomb in attempt to rob bank
  2. Bodies of 2 infants found along river
  3. Bird-watchers undaunted by H7N9 virus
  4. China destroys nearly 30 mln pirated publications
  5. Beijing officials to sweep streets