After the Anti-Japanese War broke out in 1937, he returned home and found and rescued a lot of Chinese national treasures, becoming professor of sculpture at Hangzhou Academy, where he taught Wu Guanzhong.[3] In 1949 he became professor of art history at Chengdu Art Academy and in 1952 a professor at Northwest Art Academy.[2] Wang Ziyun went to Shaanxi,[4] and to Gansu, Qinghai and other places to carry on research on China's ancient legacy, as leader of the Northwest Art and Relics Research Team.[5]
^ abSullivan, Michael (2006). Modern Chinese Artists: A Biographical Dictionary. University of California Press. p. 168. ISBN9780520244498.
^Wu Guanzhong (1992). 吴冠中自选画集 [Wu Guanzhong's personal selection of paintings]. Oriental Publishing House. p. 218. ISBN9787506002721.
^Baker, Janet (1993). Appeasing the spirits: Sui and Tang dynasty tomb sculpture from the Schloss collection. Hofstra University. p. 20. OCLC633498538.
^Fraser, Sarah E. (2011). "Sino-Tibetan Cultural Exchange, 1941-43". In Lo Bue, Erberto (ed.). Proceedings of the Tenth Seminar of the IATS, 2003. Volume 13: Art in Tibet: Issues in Traditional Tibetan Art from the Seventh to the Twentieth Century. BRILL. p. 121. ISBN9789004155190.