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The University had an art department which stressed Chinese traditional painting. By 1943 a separate section of European art had been added. Several faculty members began to paint Christian subjects in Chinese style. They were encouraged by Archbishop Celso Costantini (1876-1958), first Apostolic Delegate of the Vatican to China. He had been a devotee of the arts for many years. Already in 1923, one year after his assignment to China, he had encouraged the development of a distinctive Chinese Christian art. He had four beliefs: Western style art is a style unsuited to China; Western Christian art used in China gives the impression that Christianity is a Western, not universal religion; the Church throughout its history has adopted and adapted local art forms; Chinese art and culture provide many opportunities for adoption and adaptation. In 1937, the first Chinese Catholic Art Exhibit was held at Furen University.

Luke Chen, a prominent leader of the Furen University painters, in describing this Chinese Christian art form said: "I believe that when I paint the wonders of Christianity according to the ancient rules of Chinese art, the painted object exerts an externally new and unusual effect, so that at the same time I enrich to a marked degree, the old rules of Chinese painting."

This observation of Luke Chen rings true. Similar to the icons of the Russian and Greek Churches, Christian paintings in Chinese style inspire a certain sense of divinity and reverence.

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