“Qi Baishi started receiving artistic training... which consisted of fundamentals in
gongbi (工筆) mode, which features fine brushwork and meticulous detail”. He was taught that every aspect of painting mattered, from the subject matter to the way the ink was applied to the paper. His landscape paintings came as a result of his next mentor Tan Pu. Because of his training, he then realized that he could pursue art as his full-time career instead of just dreaming to become a professional artist. Despite his training in
gongbi, Qi is famed for painting in the freely expressive
xieyi (寫意 ‘sketching thoughts’) style. Qi was popular for his variety of works ranging from plant to animal life; because of his natural style, collectors both “artistic and political” purchased his work. According to the article,
Qi Baishi [Ch’i Pai-shih;
zi Huang;
hao Baishi Laoren, Baishi Shanqeng]: "Qi's works were based on his life and his character. After the fall of the Qing dynasty Qi was known for not letting all the political issues affect his work and keeping his own values and ideas through the harsh times. According to Confucian standards, starting off as nothing and creating a name for yourself, as Qi did, was very honorable. Qi managed to master many different techniques including calligraphy and seal-carving. After establishing himself in Hunan as a painter and artist, it wasn't until his forties that he began traveling and looking for more inspiration. Qi came upon the
Shanghai School, which was very popular at the time, and met
Wu Changshuo who then became another mentor to him and inspired a lot of Qi's works. Another influence of Qi didn't come until about fifteen years later who was Chen Shizeng (陳師曾) who he became close to when he was living in Beijing. Qi was becoming more and more well-known and sought after. While not overtly political, Qi's work in the early 20th century reflected tensions between tradition and modernity. His style evolved to eventually strip away a level of polish associated with more traditional élite Chinese court painting. Yet at the same time, his work translated these traditional folk ideas into a register for an educated urban audience. Like many other artists and intellectuals, Qi viewed the ascent to power of the
Chinese Communist Party in 1949, in the aftermath of the
Chinese Civil War, with a degree of fear. He told fellow artist
Xu Beihong that he feared for his life if he did not flee the country into exile. When Qi eventually did receive a quasi-formal visit from officials, they expressed admiration for his work. Qi's work in the immediate aftermath of the Chinese Civil War put his own work in a context in line with the
May Fourth Movement. For instance, he saw his depictions of farm tools as analogous to working in agricultural labor. The superficially traditional and apolitical themes of his work largely spared Qi from political interference in contrast to other artists of the period. To the contrary, he received explicit and implicit endorsement from the state and political leaders. His vitality was used in government propaganda, and
Mao Zedong collected Qi's work. It was sometimes seen by other artists that Qi's approach served as a model for reconciling artistic freedom with the Chinese political context after the CCP's rise to power. Qi was “elected to the National People’s Congress and made honorary Chairman of the National Artists Association in the early 1950s. He was viewed as representing a continuing commitment to traditional cultural values in revolutionary China”. He died at age 93. ==Settling down==