Zhu Gui (printmaker)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Page from the Imperially commissioned illustrations of agriculture and sericulture (Tilling and Weaving) (1696). Woodblock print by Zhu Gui after designs by Jiao Bingzhen. Chester Beatty Library
Double page from the "Illustrations of the Grand Ceremony Celebrating Longevity", 1716-1717. Bibliothèque nationale de France

Zhu Gui (朱圭, c. 1644–1717) was a wood carver from Qing Dynasty, born in Suzhou, Jiangsu. Zhu assisted Jin Guliang (金古良) in creating the Wu Shuang Pu (1694), a book with pictures of forty heroes. He also made the 46 paintings of "Tilling and Weaving" (1696), by order of the Kangxi Emperor.[1][2] Furthermore he made the 146 pictures in the "Book of the ceremony of longevity" (1717), this original 1717 version of the longevity ceremony is stored in the Palace Museum in the Forbidden City in Beijing in China.

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