Sarah's main achievements

Sarah is a famous painter, poet, art educator and activist. The word "Jin Cao" is called "Nan Guo Teng Weng". People from Wenzhou, Zhejiang. He has served as the dean of East China Yunhai Painting Academy, the dean of Zhejiang Hanlin Painting and Calligraphy Institute, the librarian of Fujian Literature and History Museum, the director of Shanghai Artists Association and the consultant of Wu Daozi Painting Academy, Zhejiang Yixian Painting Academy, Northeast Gulong Printing Society, Fujian Education Painting Academy and Mindong CPPCC Painting and Calligraphy Institute. Teng Weng was born in a family of calligraphy and painting. When he was in his teens, he held a father-son exhibition with his father, Mr. Wang Nan, and became famous in southern Zhejiang. In the 194s, he studied in Shanghai Fine Arts College and Hangzhou National Art College, and actively participated in the patriotic student movement. He was a proud disciple of Chinese painting masters Liu Haisu, Huang Binhong and Pan Tianshou. In 1949, he joined the People's Liberation Army's South Service Mission to Fujian, and worked in Fujian Provincial Committee of the Youth League, Fujian Pictorial, Fujian Publishing Bureau and Fujian Artists Association. Since then, he has formed an indissoluble bond with the mountains and rivers in Fujian. Mr. Sarah, with extensive knowledge and extraordinary talent, has profound attainments and research in poetry, books, painting and aesthetics. His paintings, which emphasize artistic conception, charm and conception, are traditional but not formal, and his brushwork is bold and bold, moist and dripping, which won the interest of Master Huang Binhong's brushwork. He learned calligraphy from Wang Xianzhi and Li Beihai all the way, and he was eclectic. He was vigorous and fluent, and he joined in grass in his later years, which was even more interesting. His poems are sincere in emotion, straightforward in expression, with pictures in them, bold, straightforward, fresh and natural, and his pleasure and pride come to the fore when he reads them.