Huang Yi (Qing dynasty)
Huang Yi (Chinese: 黄易) (1744-1801), a.k.a. Da Yi; Qiu An; Xiao Song was a painter and seal carver during the Qing dynasty.
Huang was from Hangzhou.[1] He served briefly as a government official in Yanzhou District, but was primarily a painter and seal carver. A student of Ding Jing, he was one of the Eight Masters of Xiling. Since he and Ding Jing were both seal carvers and calligraphers, they became known by the joint surname, "Ding Huang".[2] Huang was also a close acquaintance of Weng Fanggang.[1]
Huang travelled widely and published diaries and collections of paintings based on his travels. He primarily travelled in search of ancient stone inscriptions, which he preserved as rubbings for posterity.[3]
Examples of seals by Huang Yi
gollark: But *persecuting* individuals instead of just being broken and failing them... well, there are probably examples, I just don't know how exactly to find them.
gollark: Well, "it starves people" is obvious and well-documented.
gollark: I have no idea where to look up specifically "people for whom communism has been bad".
gollark: Your meme is basically "rhetoric" too.
gollark: Ah yes, because that is always true and accurate and nobody has EVER been hurt by "communism"!
References
- Shane McCausland; Yin Hwang (1 November 2013). On Telling Images of China: Essays in Narrative Painting and Visual Culture. Hong Kong University Press. p. 230. ISBN 978-988-8139-43-9.
- Weizu Sun (2004). Chinese Seals: Carving Authority and Creating History. Long River Press. p. 60. ISBN 978-1-59265-013-2.
- Robert S. Nelson; Margaret Olin (2003). Monuments and Memory, Made and Unmade. University of Chicago Press. pp. 37–56. ISBN 978-0-226-57157-7.
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