Zhao Zhiqian
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Born1829
Died1884 (age 56)
OthernamesYifu (益甫), Lengjun (冷君), Huishu (撝叔), Bei'an (悲盦)
Occupation(s)Calligrapher, seal carver, painter, scholar
Zhao Zhiqian | |
|---|---|
赵之谦 | |
A leaf from Zhao Zhiqian's album, Flowers, completed in 1859. | |
| Born | 1829 |
| Died | 1884 (age 56) |
| Other names | Yifu (益甫), Lengjun (冷君), Huishu (撝叔), Bei'an (悲盦) |
| Occupation(s) | Calligrapher, seal carver, painter, scholar |
| Academic work | |
| Notable works | Yonglu Xianjie |
| Influenced | Wu Changshuo, Qi Baishi |
Zhao Zhiqian (Chinese: 赵之谦; 1829–1884) was a Chinese calligrapher, seal carver and painter in the late Qing Dynasty, "the leading scholar-artist of his day." Zhao's seal carving had profound influence on the later masters, such as Wu Changshuo and Qi Baishi. He is also known under the courtesy name of Yifu (益甫) and his pseudonym (hào) of Lengjun (冷君), which he changed to Huishu (撝叔) and Bei'an (悲盦) respectively later in his life.[1]

