After getting married in Jieyang, Chen went to
Shantou in 1929, at the age of 21. His work was exhibited in Shanghai (1931, 1933) and
Guangzhou (1932, 1936). In 1937, he received recognition and praise of Chinese painter
Xu Beihong at the second Chinese National Art Exhibition in
Nanjing. In the same year, an English arts magazine elected him as one of contemporary China's ten greatest artists. He left China in 1947 and had further exhibitions in
Saigon (1948), Hong Kong (1949),
Bangkok –
Kuala Lumpur (1949), and
Bangkok-Singapore (1950). In Singapore, he proceeded to teach art at
The Chinese High School (1949–1968) and the
Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (1951–1959). Chen travelled to various places in Southeast Asia to collect drawing materials during his
vacations, and he was especially inspired by the people and
customs of
Bali and
Java. In June 1955, Chen took part in a seven-artist group exhibition organised by the
Singapore Art Society. In 1968, Chen retired from
teaching, and decided to concentrate on drawing. Between 1923 and 1992, he conducted 38 one-man exhibitions in Singapore and other countries such as China,
Taiwan, Malaysia, Japan, Australia,
New Zealand and Hong Kong. ==Style==