Zhu Zhanji's masterpiece Three Mice, what did you draw? What's the point?

Zhu Zhanji was Emperor Xuanzong of the Tang Dynasty, and he was the fifth emperor of the Ming Dynasty. The eldest son of Emperor Renzong of Ming Dynasty, became the empress Zhang 4 102, and was in office from the first year of Hongxi (1425) to the tenth year of Xuande (1435). ?

Ming Xuanzong also gave himself a nickname, Changchun Zhenren and Emperor Zhang respectively. Ming Xuanzong reign 10 years, collectively known as Ming Renzong? Ren Xuanzhi? . Zhu Zhanji was an emperor with political achievements in the history of Ming Dynasty.

Zhu Zhanji is a man with open mind, active personality and profound artistic accomplishment. He likes calligraphy and ink painting. In ink painting, he is especially good at flower-and-bird painting, landscape painting and animal painting. His image is vivid, his composition is ingenious, and his brushwork is very comfortable.

Zhu Zhanji's "Three Mice" are three paintings, each with the image of a mouse. In the first picture, a mouse in Zhu Zhanji is looking up at bitter gourd in a tree. In his works, the fine hairs on the mice are extracted incisively and vividly, from which we seem to be able to feel the interesting scene that the mice desperately wanted enough bitter gourd at that time, but they always wanted it.

In the second picture, a gray mouse is eating a litchi, and the mouse is eating litchi, which has auspicious meaning. As you can see, the mouse is eating litchi while looking at the surrounding environment. Moreover, the shell of this litchi was bitten off by a mouse, revealing the white pulp inside, which shows that the mouse was enjoying delicious litchi at that time. Zhu Zhanji made the cautious attitude of mice vivid.

Zhu Zhanji's third painting shows a mouse eating three lychees. These three lychees have leaves. It looks like fresh litchi that just landed. This white mouse stands out against the black background. It is obvious that this painting was painted in the dark. This white mouse is enjoying its three delicious lychees in the corner of the night.

In the traditional culture of China, litchi symbolizes money. Therefore, Zhu Zhanji's painting of a rat eating litchi symbolizes that the finance of the Ming Dynasty can become stronger and stronger, and the national treasury can be enriched.