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Dong Qichang [Tung Chi-chang; zi Xuanzai; hao Sibo, Siweng, Xiangguang, Xiangguang jushi; Wenmin]
(b Shanghai, 10 Feb 1555; d Dec 1636). Chinese painter, calligrapher, connoisseur, theoretician, collector and high official. At the age of 12 Dong Qichang, the son of a local school-teacher, passed the prefectural civil-service examination to qualify as a Government Student (shengyuan) and was awarded a coveted place in the prefectural school. Mortified, however, at being ranked below his younger kinsman Dong Chuanxu because of his clumsy calligraphy, from 1571 Dong resolved to study calligraphy in earnest. His initial models were rubbings of works by the Tang-period (AD 618907) calligraphers Yan Zhenqing and Yu Shinan (558638), but soon realizing the superior merits of the Six Dynasties (AD 222589) calligraphers, he turned to the works of Zhong You (AD 151230) and the great Wang Xizhi (see WANG (i), (1)). After three years he was confident of having grasped their style, and no longer admired works by the Ming-period (13681644) masters Wen Zhengming and Zhu Yunming.
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