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This is "A Little House", meaning the tiny one halfway up the mountain. Chang does not employ Western perspective in his paintings.
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A contemplative work titled "Alone With the Pine Tree". Pines are among his favorite subjects, as are mountains and the lovely lotus.
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"Lotus" shows the brilliance of Chang's brushwork. Strong leaf emphasizes flower's delicacy.
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Chang Dai-chien's love of mountains comes from Switzerland as well as from China. These are quite clearly the Alps and not the mountains of the painter's homeland. A steeple can be seen in the bottom painting.
It is interesting, though, that the boats in the middle picture have more of a Chinese than a Western look. The trees of Chang have a black, heavy look and tend toward the abstract.
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Influence of abstraction can be seen in landscape. The ink has been splashed on the Chinese cotton paper.
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Waterfall descends this somber mountain in two leaps. At the bottom, the painting lightens sufficiently to reveal houses and bridges. Chang's works have been widely exhibited in the United States and Europe. One of his paintings was sold to an American museum for the record contemporary Chinese price of US$60,000.
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Mountain, clouds, and fog emerge in this effective use of shading. Technique is ink splashed on golden yellow cotton paper.
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"Hills" has more patches of light than the painting at left. A quarter of a million people attended Chang's Taipei exhibition.
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Tiny boat (left foreground) almost gets lost in the big lake under a brooding mountain. During his European period, Chang Dai-chien found a friend and critic in Pablo Picasso.
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"Aafchen See" goes back to the Swiss period for its inspiration. The Communists tried to persuade Chang to return to the mainland. He refused because "there is no freedom there"