Calla Lily
108 Flowers - Book 1
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22m
The Yellow Emperor (2497-2398 BC) wished for a way to communicate with his people. In his dream, he saw celestial horses descending from heaven. Each carried a scroll with characters that became the Chinese language. These celestial horses roamed across China. Near where they stopped for water, flowers rose to receive their footprints.
Enjoy Ning's enchanting storytelling and background information of how the Calla Lily came to be as he walks you step-by-step through the entire painting process - brush choice, loading the brush with colors, and brush stroke technique.
Up Next in 108 Flowers - Book 1
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Carnation
"For years, I rejected carnation as a flower impossible to paint. In reality, it was laziness. It was also fear. Everything is beautiful in its own way. Surprise, carnation turns out to be a wonderful subject."
Ning takes what he deemed a challenging flower to paint and teach and tackles it with...
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Cattleya Orchid
Cattleya Orchid was Madame Chiang Kai-shek' favorite flower and the Chinese honor her by calling the flower Mei Ling, her first name. Paint this composition following Ning's expert instruction and using only ink and water. In the minds of master brush painters, this is the ultimate expression of ...
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Chili Pepper
Although the home that Ning grew up in was a 'hot pepper heaven' for him, with his food having spicy influences from both Sichuan and Hunan cuisines, Chili Pepper, the subject featured in this composition was actually not native to China, but rather was brought to Asia by Portuguese navigators du...