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Fu Baoshi's "Two Ways", what made the society accept his figure painting?
"Two Ways" is the representative work of Du Fu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, and also of Mr. Fu Baoshi. The work shows the grand occasion of Yang Guifei's family going out for an outing on March 3rd. "There are many beauties beside the Chang 'an River" and "acceptance, indifference, gentleness and sincerity" reflect the fatuity of kings and the corruption of current politics. There is no doubt that what Fu Baoshi refers to in his works is obvious.

The whole painting is divided into five groups, and the characters in each group are different and separated by different trees, which shows the author's ingenuity. In a figure painting with as many as 37 people, Fu Baoshi left out the arrangement of the beginning and the end, showing a more grand scene in line with the theme. In the use of techniques, the characters are set off by the shade of trees. In this wonderful black-and-white contrast, "soft skin and fine bones" and "embroidered twilight" stand out from the characters, and their themes are more distinct.

It is understood that "Two for Tao" is a relatively long work created by Mr. Fu Baoshi in War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression period, which is based on Du Fu's poem "Two for Tao" in Tang Dynasty. It is said that Fu Baoshi painted this painting to satirize the powerful figures of the Kuomintang government at that time. "Two Roads" is the representative work of Fu Baoshi's figure painting, and Zhang Daqian spoke highly of it, calling it an unprecedented artistic masterpiece. Fu Baoshi gave this painting to Mr. Guo Moruo.