While established artists like
Qi Baishi, Liu Haisu, and Huang Binhong were left to go on painting in their own way, masters of the next generation were under great pressure to dedicate their art to the revolution by painting images of reconstruction, dam building, and peasant life, or even illustrating a line from poems written by Mao. For instance, the
guohua artist Fu Baoshi was given a number of important commissions, most notably the iconic landscape painting,
Such is the Beauty of Our Rivers and Mountains, a collaboration with Guan Shanyue that adorns the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Painted on a grand scale, this painting illustrates a line from one of Mao's poems, called "Snow" in which he describes gazing over the northern landscape. The painting's title is drawn from a line the poem and became a slogan for mapping China’s territory through art providing
guohua artists with a political justification for reinventing the tradition of Chinese landscape painting. With a blazing red sun rising over the mountainous terrain, Fu Baoshi transformed the landscape into a bold statement of national pride under Communist leadership—the land that Mao reclaimed for the people of China.Other artists, like Pan Tianshou, were also under great pressure to steer their ink painting to communist themes and styles. In
Red Lotus, a lotus flower rises from murky waters. However, the flower is not pictured in its typical, natural hue of pale pink, but in a deep, crimson red that echoes the red sun rising over the northern landscape in Fu Baoshi and Guan Shanyue’s mural. Blood-red crimson, a subtle repurposing of the vermilion red that signified the bygone imperial era.
By the 1960s, guohua artists were in a more precarious position. In Li Keran’s Ten Thousand Crimson Hills, painted in 1964, red-stained mountains in a densely packed composition appear ominous. Although Li painted this work in the same year as Sun Zixi’s In Front of Tiananmen, the emotional intensity of his ink painting seems to be the opposite of the bright and optimistic mood that characterizes socialist realism. Several major crises of the late 1950s might explain the new approaches of artists like Li and Sun.
In the Hundred Flowers Movement, Mao seemingly invited criticism of the Party through the slogan, “Let a hundred flowers bloom, let a hundred schools of thought contend.” Many intellectuals took him at his word and urged a gradual transformation of the Party’s hardline policies that had alienated the intelligentsia. In response, Mao ruined the lives of more than 300,000 people who had spoken out, sending a clear message of conformity to everyone—especially artists. Soon after, Mao's Great Leap Forward became a large-scale disaster. The Great Leap Forward was an economic and social plan intended to transform China into a modern, industrialized society but ended in famine and widespread suffering. It was thought that by melting down all available metal in “backyard furnaces,” China would produce the steel needed to modernize and compete with the rest of the world. Unfortunately, the idea resulted in widespread death and famine, since peasants were diverted from the fields and melted down farm implements and tools they needed for agriculture. Through the two years of bad harvests that ensued, it is estimated that over 20 million Chinese died. These events were not depicted in art.