STOMP - Singapore Seen - No, this is not a Chinese painting -- it's a ...
STOMPer photopaint was amazed by these photographs which greatly resemble paintings, done by a Chinese artist who was raised in Vietnam after his parents passed away. The STOMPer wrote:"Using a style known as pictorialism, <a href="http://hospital.99mr.com/nanjingyimeishangdongmeig"><strong>南京伊美尚 </strong></a> Chinese artist Dong Honh-Oai was able to create a series of amazing photographs that look like Chinese traditional paintings."Born in 1929, in Guangzhou, China's Guangdong province,*Dong Hong-Oai left his home country when he was just 7, after the sudden death of his parents. "The youngest of 24 siblings, <a href="http://hospital.99mr.com/beijingbakangzhensuo/"><strong>北京疤康诊所</strong></a> he was sent to live within the Chinese community of Saigon, Vietnam. There he became an apprentice at a photography studio owned by Chinese immigrants and learned the basics of photography. "He was forced to leave Vietnam during the war between Vietnam and China in the 70s and 80s, and lived in San Francisco for a time."He sold his photographs for a living there, which allowed him to return to China to take landscape photographs."Under the tutelage of famous master Long Chin-San, who died in 1995, at the age of 105, Honh-Qai had been trained in the traditional <a href="http://hospital.99mr.com/jinchengxiandainvziyiyuan"><strong>晋城现代女 *</strong></a> art of Chinese landscape imagery painting, *which wasn't intended to accurately depict nature, but to interpret nature's emotional impact. "The dramatic monochromatic landscapes created using simple brushes and ink combined different art form (poetry, calligraphy and painting) and allowed artists to more fully express themselves."
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