or Mu-hsi Fa-ch'ang
flourished 13th century, Sichuan province, China
Chinese Chan (Japanese: Zen ) Buddhist painter.
Toward the end of the Southern Song dynasty (11271279), Muqi fled to a monastery near Hangzhou. He painted a variety of subjects
including landscapes, flowers, still lifes, and more orthodox iconographic subjects. The most famous paintings associated with Muqi include Six Persimmons and a triptych with a white-robed Guanyin flanked on either side by a scroll of monkeys and a crane. The paintings vary in style and subject matter, but there is throughout a sense of immediate vision and a totally responsive hand, expressed with broad and evocative washes of ink. His paintings on Chan themes stimulated many copies in Japan.