Wen Zhengming was born Wen Bi near present-day
Suzhou on 28 November 1470. He would later be known by his
courtesy name, Zhengming. He had an elder brother, Wen Gui, who was born in 1469. When Zhengming was two years old, his father, Wen Lin, passed the
imperial examination with the highest possible rank,
jinshi. Wen Lin was assigned a government position as a magistrate in
Yongjia County in
Zhejiang province, and left for his job, leaving his two sons in the care of his wife, Qi Shenning. In 1476, Qi died of an illness at the age of 32. Wen Lin commissioned the noted scholar
Li Dongyang to write an inscription for her tomb. Wen Zhengming's family was originally from a line of military men who lived in
Hengshan County,
Hunan province. At the time of his great-great-grandfather Wen Dingcong, the family moved to the city of
Changzhou in the Suzhou area. Zhengming was a distant relative of the
Song dynasty official
Wen Tianxiang, through an ancestor who lived in Hengshan. From this he derived his
hao (
art name), Hengshan, which he used to sign many of his works. His father Wen Lin and his grandfather Wen Hong (Gongda) were both interested in painting. Wen Lin was also a patron of
Tang Yin, Wen Zhengming's contemporary and fellow member of the "
Four Masters of the Ming dynasty". In 1489, Wen Zhengming began studying under
Shen Zhou, the eldest of the Four Masters and founder of the
Wu school of painting, of which Wen himself later became a leading figure. Zhengming's father Wen Lin died in 1499, while working as prefect of
Wenzhou. At Zhengming's request, Shen Zhou provided a written account of Wen Lin's life for the funeral. Wen Zhengming married the daughter of a high-ranking official and
jinshi named Wu Yu around the year 1490. Her uncle was the artist
Xia Chang, whose paintings of bamboo may have influenced Wen's own work. Little is known about Wen's wife herself, whose personal name was not recorded. After she died in 1542, Wen painted
Wintry Trees after Li Cheng for a guest who arrived with a gift to mourn her death. Around 1509–1513, Wang Xianchen, a friend of the Wen family, began construction on the
Humble Administrator's Garden, generally considered one of China's greatest classical gardens. The garden is the subject of some of Wen Zhengming's poems and paintings, including an album of thirty-one views painted in 1535 and a second of eight views in 1551. Wen Zhengming's brother Wen Gui died in 1536. Zhengming's eldest son,
Wen Peng, was a noted
seal-engraver. His second son.
Wen Jia, was also an artist, as was his nephew
Wen Boren (son of Wen Gui). His great-grandson,
Wen Zhenheng, a noted garden designer, rebuilt the
Garden of Cultivation in Suzhou. His great-granddaughter,
Wen Shu, was a popular and respected professional painter of flowers and insects. ==Style==