Chow Chung-cheng

Chow Chung-cheng (Chinese: 周仲铮; pinyin: Zhōu Zhòngzhēng; July 20, 1908 in Yanping, Fujian August 31, 1996 in Bonn, Germany) was a Chinese artist known for her finger painting and autobiographical books.

Early life

She was the 4th child in a family of two girls and three boys (2 boys died young). Her father, Zhou Xuehui, the youngest son of Zhou Fu was a successful businessman who ran many of his brother Zhou Xuexi's enterprises.[1] She was born Zhou Lianquan (Chinese 周莲荃 or 周莲全), but later changed her name to Zhongzheng.

Running away

Zhou was home schooled initially. When her demand to attend public school like her brothers and male cousins was denied, she seized the opportunity when her grandfather Zhou Fu died in 1921 in Tianjin, ran away to Beijing. After three months negotiation with her parents openly, she returned home after they agreed that she and her sister to attend public school, freedom to choose husbands.[2]:12

Schooling

She attended Beiyang Women Normal School (now Hebei Normal University and then Nankai University for three years. As a junior she left Nankai for Europe on September 21, 1926.[2]:46 Her destination was England to studying medicine but she enrolled at Sciences Po in Paris, obtaining PhD degree in political science in 1933.[2]:43

Late life

She returned to China in 1936 with her husband and settled in Beijing but soon returned to Paris and remarried a German in 1940. She taught at Leiden University for 3 years. When World War II broke out they moved to Berlin. To make a living after the war, she studied painting from 1951 to 1953 under Prof. Alfred Mahlau at the Hochschule für bildende Künste Hamburg[3] (University of Fine Arts in Hamburg). She had exhibitions of her paintings in West Germany, France, Italy, Spain and China. Her first book Kleine Sampan was translated into English, French, Italian and Dutch.[4] Most of her paintings were donated to Tianjin Art Museum (Chinese: 天津艺术博物馆).[2]:86

Publications[5]

References

  1. Feuerwerker, Albert (1967). Industrial Enterprise in Twentieth-Century China. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press. LCCN 67-15640. p. 329
  2. 1 2 3 4 Zhou, Weizeng (Chinese: 周慰曾),(2004). The Lady of Bonn and China (Chinese: 波恩的中国人中国的波恩人). Tianjin Guji Chubanshe. ISBN 7-80696-037-6
  3. Library of Congress; retrieved September 23, 2015
  4. Bio: Chinese translation of Kleine Sampan - "小舟" (1986). Beijing: Zhongguo Wenlian Chubanshe, # 10355.173
  5. Deutsche National Biblothek
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