How much is the painting by Dong Qichang, a painter in Ming Dynasty?

Dong Qichang (1555- 1636), whose real name was Xuanzai, was named as a Buddhist of Sibai and Xiangguang. Han nationality, from Huating, Songjiang (now Maqiao, Minhang District, Shanghai), was a painter and calligrapher in Ming Dynasty. In the seventeenth year of Wanli, he was a scholar and was awarded editing by the Hanlin Academy. He became an official of Nanjing Ritual Department, and changed his name to "Wen Min" after his death.

Dong Qichang is good at painting mountains and rivers, learning from Dong Yuan, Huang and Ni Zan, and his brushwork is delicate and neutral, quiet and elegant; Clean and bright with ink fragrance, gentle and plain; Green, simple and generous. He is an outstanding representative of Huating School of Painting and has the beauty of "Yan Gu Zhao Zi". His painting and painting theory had a great influence on the painting world in the late Ming and early Qing dynasties. Calligraphy in and out of the Jin and Tang dynasties, sui generis, can make poetry.

The existing works include Rock House Map, Eight Scenes of Autumn in Dong Qichang in Ming Dynasty, Map of Zhou Jintang, Pipa of Bai Juyi, Poems in Cursive Script, Postscript of Jiang Yan and so on. [1] He is the author of Essays on Painting Zen Rooms, Collected Works of Rong Tai, Notes on Xihongtang, etc.

The average collection price in Dong Qichang in 2009 was 48. 1 10,000 square feet, while that in Dong Qichang in 2009 was 48. 1 10,000 square feet. The price of a painting can be calculated according to the size of the canvas. It may be hundreds to tens of millions.