He became famous for his paintings of horses, then he turned to
Buddhism and
Taoism religious painting, as well as
portrait and
landscape painting. His painting style was attributed to the style of
Gu Kaizhi and
Wu Daozi. He made antiquarian contributions in the areas of copperware and
Jade Seal dated between the
Xia dynasty and the
Zhou dynasty. Li published influential catalogues on his collections. The catalogues, of which none survive, featured a line drawing of each artefact, the philological origin of any inscriptions, and a discussion of the function of the artefact based on his interpretation of received texts. Li's work lay the foundation of Song antiquarian nomenclature and use interpretation of ancient bronze vessels. For example, his use of the term
taotie based on 3rd and 4th century BCE scripture for a mask like decoration on bronze vessels, became standard vocabulary for the description of bronze vessels and is still used by scholars today. == References ==