Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Inscription" and "Chengxin Tang"
This episode of the National Palace Museum's "Travelling Through Brush and Ink" video series discusses the importance of the scholars' studio and the items kept there. Early scholars placed a large emphasis on the values of painting and calligraphy paraphernalia, but simple brushes, inks, papers, and inkstones for writing later gained prominence and appreciation.
Up Next
01:42Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Three Passages: Ping'an, Heru, and Fengju"
02:31Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Draft of a Requiem for My Nephew"
02:31Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Autobiography"
03:03Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "The Cold Food Observance"
02:30Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "On Sichuan Silk"
02:46Traveling Through Brush and Ink: The Art of Emperor Song Huizong
03:10Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Emperor Minghuang's Journey to Shu"
02:53Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Travelers Among Mountains and Streams"
03:32Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Early Spring"
03:02Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Wind in Pines Among a Myriad Valleys"
01:11Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Magpies and Hare"
01:18Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Three Friends of Winter"
02:32Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Walking on a Mountain Path in Spring"
02:49Traveling Through Brush and Ink: "Autumn Colors on the Ch'iao and Hua Mountains"
02:59Traveling Through Brush and Ink: Panoramic View from the Suao to Hualien Roadway
03:45Traveling Through Brush and Ink

