Song Xu
Appearance
Song Xu (
Buddhist priest and adopted various religious names. He was, according to some sources from Jixing in Zhejiang province, but others assert that he was from Huzhou
in Zhejiang Province.
Song was and extremely well read and well versed individual who was greatly influenced by
. Song's eccentric paintings are often characterized by inscriptions in characters of an archaic style. He was largely individualistic and independent, working for the most part outside the major painting schools of his age.An extant painting of Buddhist Arhats bears a date of 1605. Other works show a still active painter at eighty-one.
Eighteen Views of Huzhou

Song Xu's series Eighteen Views of Huzhou ('湖州十八景圖) was produced c. 1588. These annotated landscapes are of scenic locations renowned for their beauty around the city of Wuxing, southeastern China.[1]
The album is held by
The Cleveland Museum of Art
.
Gallery
References
- ^ Song Xu (c. 1588). "Eighteen Views of Huzhou". Cleveland Museum of Art. Retrieved 30 October 2020.
- James Cahill, The Distant Mountains, Weatherhill, New York and Tokyo, 1982, pp. 63–66.
- Yu Lianhua, Encyclopedia of Chinese Artists (Zhongguo meishu jia renming cidian), Shanghai, p. 323.