Chu Teh Chun

Chu Teh-Chun was a French-Chinese artist whose work was at the forefront of the integration of traditional Chinese painting styles with Western abstraction in the 20th century. Along with his close friends and classmates Wu Guanzhong and Zao Wou-Ki – who were nicknamed the “Three Musketeers” of Chinese modernist art – Chu was elected as […]


Chu Teh-Chun was a French-Chinese artist whose work was at the forefront of the integration of traditional Chinese painting styles with Western abstraction in the 20th century. Along with his close friends and classmates Wu Guanzhong and Zao Wou-Ki – who were nicknamed the “Three Musketeers” of Chinese modernist art – Chu was elected as member of the Académie des Beaux Arts in France. His work, along with that of Wu and Zao, indelibly influenced the artists of subsequent generations.

Born in 1920 in Hangzhou, China, Chu studied at the National School of Arts, where he met Wu and Zao. He taught Western painting styles at the National Taiwan Normal University in the early 1950s, until moving to Paris, where he lived for the remainder of his life; he would become a French citizen in 1980. No

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