Wu Faxiang
Appearance
Wu Faxiang | |
---|---|
吳發祥 | |
Born | 1578 |
Died | after 1657 |
Known for | Scholar of Confucianism |
Notable work | Luoxuan biangu jianpu |
Wu Faxiang (Chinese: 吳發祥; c. 1578-after 1657) was a printer and publisher in late Ming dynasty China.
Wu hailed from Nanjing, and lived near Tianque Mountain. He was a scholar of Confucianism.[1]
Wu is known for a single publication, the Luoxuan biangu jianpu, or Wisteria Pavilion Catalogue of Letter Papers, published in 1626. This book contained samples of his studio's decorative writing papers. It was the first publication to make use of the gonghua stamping technique which he invented for embossing images.[2][3] His better-known contemporary, Hu Zhengyan, made use of this technique in his own Shizhuzhai jianpu (Ten Bamboo Catalogue of Letter Papers).[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Wright, Suzanne E. (1 January 2003). ""Luoxuan biangu jianpu" and "Shizhuzhai jianpu": Two Late-Ming Catalogues of Letter Paper Designs". Artibus Asiae. 63 (1): 69–122. JSTOR 3249694.
- ^ Simon Eliot; Jonathan Rose (24 August 2011). A Companion to the History of the Book. John Wiley & Sons. p. 107. ISBN 978-1-4443-5658-8.
- ^ Yongxiang Lu (10 October 2014). A History of Chinese Science and Technology. Springer. p. 206. ISBN 978-3-662-44166-4.