Which painter in China paints plum blossoms best at present?
Among the many paintings exhibited by many painters, Li (born in 1943, Yingshang, Anhui). Li transferred from the army to Fuyang Art Troupe as the deputy director of the Art Committee. After that, it was handed over to the Cultural Relics Bureau Exhibition Hall. He has created print works such as New Lessons for Evening School, Counseling Report and Two Generations, and published them in Selected Black and White Prints, People's Daily, Wen Wei Po, Beijing Review and Anhui Black and White Woodcut. Li founded the cultural industry in 1980s, and served as the process director and manager of Oasis Real Estate Company. Invented polymer technology, won the scientific and technological progress of the Ministry of Culture and national patents. Established the Bronze Relics Research Institute and became a member of China Cultural Relics Society. ) Plum blossoms are the most eye-catching. The plum blossoms in his works are red, yellow, green and white, all of which are beautiful and attractive. But no matter what kind of plum blossom, in his works, it is lush and graceful, as Dong wrote in "Inscribed Ink Plum", "Although the flowers are cold, the ink is always new and the strength is quite sparse." Indeed, Li Zhongshu's plum blossom branches in Chinese painting are not complicated, and the branches are sparse and vigorous, often with less wins more, giving people the feeling that they are always full of charm before writing. Only a few strokes can show the plum blossom characteristics of being proud of snow and standing out from the crowd. Those blooming plum blossoms and shy flower bones are dense, simple and appropriate in his pen. Crowded and noisy; Just scattered, carefree. Make public, gorgeous as a dancer; Shy and closed, elegant as a lady. Its red berries are gorgeous without any tacky; Its Huangmei, elegant, contains a little delicate and charming; Its green plum is accompanied by elegance in rhyme style; Its charm can be summed up in one word-elegance, and described in another word-agility. Some people say that Peng Qiang's bridled eyebrows are the most ingenious, which is true. His Bai Mei doesn't need bright colors to decorate, and it doesn't need rich colors to dress up. Branches are also ink, and flowers are also ink, but once the shades change, the same ink color is obviously colorful and lifelike. If we only rely on a single ink painting, without the training of "freezing in the cold" and everyone's gas field, I am afraid that many painters will not be able to draw Bai Mei, which is unanimously praised by insiders and laymen.