Gao Qifeng | |||||||||||||||
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高奇峰 | |||||||||||||||
Born | Gao Weng (高嵡) 13 June 1889 | ||||||||||||||
Died | 2 November 1933 | (aged 44)||||||||||||||
Movement | Lingnan School | ||||||||||||||
Relatives | Gao Jianfu (brother) | ||||||||||||||
Chinese name | |||||||||||||||
Chinese | 高奇峰 | ||||||||||||||
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Gao Qifeng (Chinese: 高奇峰; pinyin: Gāo Qífēng; 13 June 1889 – 2 November 1933) was a Chinese painter who co-founded the Lingnan School with his older brother Gao Jianfu and fellow artist Chen Shuren.
Orphaned at a young age, Gao spent much of his early life following Jianfu, learning the techniques of Ju Lian before travelling to Tokyo in 1907 to study Western and Japanese painting. While abroad, Gao joined the revolutionary organization Tongmenghui to challenge the Qing dynasty; after he returned to China, he published the nationalist magazine The True Record, which later fell afoul of the Beiyang government. Although offered a position in the Republic of China, Gao chose to focus on his art. He moved to Guangzhou in 1918, taking a series of teaching positions that culminated with an honorary professorship at Lingnan University in 1925. Falling ill in 1929, Gao left the city for Ersha Island, where he took students and established the Tianfang Studio.
On the market, Gao's works tend to fetch higher prices than those of his fellow Lingnan founders. In his painting, Gao blended traditional Chinese approaches with foreign ones, using Japanese techniques for light and shadow as well as Western understandings of geometry and perspective. Although he painted landscapes and figures, he is best recognized for his paintings of animals, particularly eagles, lions, and tigers. In his brushwork, he combined the vigour of his brother's technique with the elegance of Chen's. Gao taught numerous students, including Chao Shao-an and Huang Shaoqiang; he was particularly close to Zhang Kunyi, with whom he may have been romantically involved.