The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-07.
Shih-Tao
(shûr-tou) (KEY) , 1641c.1670, Chinese painter of the late Mingearly Ching period, one of the major figures in 17th-century painting. A descendant of the imperial Ming family, he escaped persecution from the invading Manchus by becoming a Buddhist monk with the name Tao-chi. Settling in Yangzhou, he severed his ties to the Buddhist church and became a professional painter and a landscape architect. In his treatise, Hua Yu Lu, he emphasized the importance of the concept of i hua, or one line, which is variously translatable as line, unity, or a sense of oneness with nature.