Who is the painter of The Rising Sun in the Great Hall of the People?

Xu Beihong.

I. Introduction to the Works

The rising sun is a landscape pattern of Chinese painting. The origin of the rising sun: The Book of Songs Wind Bitter Leaves: "When geese crow, the rising sun begins." . It means that people or things rise like the sun, like the morning sun, full of hope and vitality.

In this design, a waterfall falls and the red sun Ran Ran rises in the distance. Whether it is a design or a name, it is very suitable for hanging in the living room. Designs like this have a long history and a larger scale.

Two. Brief introduction of the author

Xu Beihong (1July, 89519—1September 26th, 953), Han nationality, formerly known as Xu, was born in Qiting Town, Yixing County, Jiangsu Province, and was a modern painter and art educator in China.

19 17, Xu Beihong was hired as the tutor of Peking University Painting Research Association, and the highest institution of higher learning has successively made Xu Beihong a master painter and Shen and Li Zhimin, masters of Peking University calligraphy history. ?

I studied in France to study western painting, and I have been engaged in art education for a long time after returning to China. He has taught in the Art Department of National Central University, the Art College of Beiping University and Beiping Art College.

After 1949, he served as the president of the Central Academy of Fine Arts. He is good at figures, animals, flowers and birds, and advocates realism, especially Ren Bonian in tradition, emphasizing the integration of Chinese painting reform and western painting techniques, advocating light and modeling in painting, and emphasizing the anatomical structure of objects.

The accurate grasp of the skeleton and the emphasis on the ideological connotation of the works had a great influence on the painting circles in China at that time. Together with Zhang Shuqi and Liu Zigu, they are called the "Three Masters of Jinling". His traditional Chinese paintings are full of color and ink, especially running horses.