CHEN SHUN (1483-1544)

Details
CHEN SHUN (1483-1544)

Cursive Script Calligraphy (cao shu)

Handscroll, ink on gold-flecked paper, 11¼ x 507½in. (28.5 x 1299cm.)

The text consists of two poems by the artist

Signed: Baiyang Shanren Chen Daofu

Dated the twelfth day of the fourth month of wuxu year (1538)

Four seals of the artist: Da Yao, Fu Fu Shi, Bai Yang Shan Ren, Chen Dao Fu Shi

Ninteen collectors' seals

Lot Essay

Chen Shun was one of the most important Wu School calligraphers and flower painters of the Ming dynasty. Born into a modestly prosperous literati family, his first teacher was Wen Zhengming (1470-1559). Between 1519 and 1523 Chen Shun studied at the Imperial Academy in Beijing. He then returned home to Suzhou and spent a quiet life surrounded by fellow scholars and artists.

While initially influenced by the writing style of Wen Zhengming, Chen Shun quickly developed a unique individual style, which drew on the calligraphy of the ancient masters Mi Fu (1051-1107) and Yang Ningshi (873-954). His running and cursive scripts, for which he was best known, displayed his characteristic fluidity, boldness and exuberance.