The room for the evaluation was set up in a lecture hall with cascading long steps that sloped upward. The students could sit here with their canvases out and learn from the lecturer while not blocking the views of the ones behind them.
At this moment, there were only 20 or so painters that were sitting here, waiting for the moment the painting was brought in.
Tian Honglui walked in and they all got alert as it was going to begin. When Alex walked in, they all stood up and bowed to greet him. They were all aware that he was coming in, so they had been prepared for his arrival.
Some of them talked to him, asking about his painting journey. Alex smiled and told them the basics without going into just how good he had gotten.
"We're here to judge Brother Tian's painting. Let's not make this about mine," he said and went on to stay at the top where he could see everything from.
Tian Honglui went to the stage alongside senior Ran and set up the spot where he would place the painting.
Senior Ran nodded at him and walked away, making his way to the back of the room, sitting next to Alex. He greeted him and stayed silent as he was to focus back on the young man.
Tian Honglui looked at the people in the crowd, at his colleagues and his peers. All his seniors.
He took a deep breath and bowed to them all. "Thank you all for coming to my painting's evaluation," he said. "I do not wish to waste your time more than I already have, so here it is."
He pulled out the painting and placed it on the spot.
Immediately, everyone focused on the painting. There were trees on the side, the river flowing at the bottom, grass moving in the wind, and clouds spreading across the big blue sky.
And yet, everyone's eyes immediately fell on the single thing in the middle of the painting, the Golden Mountain. Feeling the gold's aura permeating through the intent that was used to carve into the paper of the canvas.
Some men stood up to get a closer look, some remained in shock even more.
One thing was true for all of them, however. They all forgot that this was an evaluation and instead looked at the painting as an art piece to enjoy.
Senior Ran smiled a little as well, happy for the young man's success. He remembered when he came to find him, saying that he was his disciple's son. Hearing about his mother's passing away was sad enough, hearing how his father treated painting was even worse.
In part anger and part responsibility were what drove him to teach the young man all the basics of painting that his mother couldn't teach and sent him away to the Dragon Capital to learn more.
He could never have imagined that he would have turned out to be this successful as a painter. Now, his father begged in his footsteps to have him return to the family.
"What do you think, your Majesty?" he asked. "That painting is good, isn't it?"
"It is," Alex said. "Looking at it, I wonder if I made a mistake being present when it was made. I wonder what sort of excitement I could've gotten had I seen it for the first time as a finished product like I had with The Players' Descent and The Lightning God's Anger."
"I can see where you're coming from, but there is a different type of enjoyment when watching someone good at his craft do something phenomenally, isn't it?" the old man asked.
Alex smiled a little. "That is true," he said, staring back at the painting.
Tian Honglui stepped to the side and waited for the people to calm down a little. Once they were calmed down, they would begin the individual inspections.
2 painters went up and spoke nothing but praises regarding the painting before walking back to their seats.
The third painter stood up, walked up to the painting, and inspected it
Senior Ran perked up a little and seemed nervous. Alex noticed that and he noticed that Tian Honglui was nervous as well.
The man stared at the painting for an unusually long time, almost one and a half times as much as each of the first two took.
"Brother Tian," the man finally spoke up. "What was the intention behind you painting this?"
"My intentions? It was to draw a painting of a mountain made up of gold," Tian Honglui said simply.
"No, that is not what I'm asking," the man said. "I'm asking what your intention was to do with the painting once you finished it."
"To have it evaluated and sent to the capital if it is considered good enough for the hall of fame," Tian Honglui said.
"I see," the painter said, staring back at the painting. "I can see that you've put a lot of effort into this painting. Mind I ask if I can see the painting you will be selling in the auction, to see the difference?"
"Bastard!" senior Ran said quietly under his breath.
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