This document summarizes Chinese painting from the Tang dynasty to the Qing dynasty in 3 sentences:
The major dynasties and formats of Chinese painting are outlined, including landscape and figure painting traditions from the Tang to Song dynasties. Specific artists and works are highlighted from different dynasties to show the evolution of painting styles. Chinese ceramics, calligraphy, and other art forms are also briefly discussed in the context of different ruling dynasties from the Ming to Qing periods.
This document summarizes Chinese painting from the Tang dynasty to the Qing dynasty in 3 sentences:
The major dynasties and formats of Chinese painting are outlined, including landscape and figure painting traditions from the Tang to Song dynasties. Specific artists and works are highlighted from different dynasties to show the evolution of painting styles. Chinese ceramics, calligraphy, and other art forms are also briefly discussed in the context of different ruling dynasties from the Ming to Qing periods.
This document summarizes Chinese painting from the Tang dynasty to the Qing dynasty in 3 sentences:
The major dynasties and formats of Chinese painting are outlined, including landscape and figure painting traditions from the Tang to Song dynasties. Specific artists and works are highlighted from different dynasties to show the evolution of painting styles. Chinese ceramics, calligraphy, and other art forms are also briefly discussed in the context of different ruling dynasties from the Ming to Qing periods.
Chronological Table of Dynasties • Tang (618-906) • Five Dynasties (907-960) • Song dynasty (960-1279): Northern Song (960-1126) and Southern Song (1129-1279); capital • Yuan dynasty (Mongols) 1260-1368 (Kubilai Khan; moved the capital to Khanbalik (Beijing), adopted Tibetan Buddhism) • Ming dynasty 1368-1644 (capital at Nanjing until 1420 then moved to Beijing) • Qing (Manchus) 1644-1912 • Republic 1912-1949 Format • Hand scroll (shou-chuan) • Hanging scroll (li chou) • Album leaves and fans: subjects are landscape or bird-and-flowers with calligraphy Handscroll, hanging scroll, Double-leaf album painting, screen fan, folding fan Wen Zhengming (1470-1559), Cypress and Rock, dated 1550 Anon., The Han Palace, S, Song, 12-13th century Wen Shu, Carnation and Garden Rock, Ming Dy, 1627 Tang Period • Figure painting • Hand scroll and hanging scrolls was the major formats • Emperor Huizong: emperor is portrayed larger than other figures, vivid colors, attention of details but no individual personality; the aim is to focus on the role of the individual Painting • The Six Laws of Painting by Xie He (c. 500-35): Spirit, Bone Method (law of using the brush), Correspondence to the object (the depicting of form), Suitability to type (laying color), Division and Planning (placing and arrangement), transmission by coping (of models) • Media: Silk and paper • Ink: monochrome used for both landscape and figure • Brush: horse, wolf, sheep, sable, and rabit 4.19 Yen Lipen (attributed), Emperor Wu Di, the Scroll of the Emperors, Tang Dynasty, 7th c. (11th century copy) Attributed to Emperor Huizong (r. 1101-25), Court ladies Preparing Silk, Tang Dy. Landscape painting • Developed rapidly in the Tang dy. and reached its apex by early Song dy. (first appears in tomb tile, inlaid bronze, and mural at Dun Huang • N-Song: a true landscape used precise line manner, depicts a sense of an estate, a group of building, a few peasants working, a fishing boat in a shore, no narrative, landscape represents in fragments, no perspective • Depth is created by placement of elements in different grounds: foreground, mid ground and back group • Literati artists were well educated elites who painted for pleasure Bamboo • Bamboo painting is special favor in the Yuan dy. • It symbolizes the true gentle man who always maintain his integrity • It is the most difficult: need precise placement of leaves and stalks and Fan Kuan (c. 960-1030), Travelers among Mountains and Streams, N. Song 4-20 Fan Kuan (c. 960-1030), Travelers among Mountains and Streams, N. Song Ma Yuan (c. 1190-1225), On a Mountain Path in Spring, with a poem by Yang Meizi S. Song dy. 4-21 Ma Yuan, Scholar Contemplating the Moon, S. Song, c. 1200 4-22 Liang Kai, Hui Neng, Chopping the bamboo at a Moment of Enlightenment, S. Song, C. 1200 4.23 Bottle vase,Guan ware, S. Song celadon 4-24 Guan Daosheng, Ten Thousands Bamboo Poles in Cloudy Mist, 1308, Yuan Dy. 4-24 Guan Daosheng, Ten Thousands Bamboo Poles in Cloudy Mist, 1308, Yuan Dy. 4-24 Guan Daosheng, Ten Thousands Bamboo Poles in Cloudy Mist, 1308, Yuan Dy. Calligraphy and Seals • By the 13th c, calligraphy and seals are frequently appear on painting • Seal script: the earliest form, used for formal contexts of inscription • Clerical script: used for bureaucratic record- keeping • Regular script: most widely used to the present • Cursive script: used for artistic expression • Drafting script: the most rapidly written script Attributed to Han Gan, Night White, Tang Dy. 4-25 Chao Mengfu, Sheep and Goat, Yuan dy. c. 1300 Ni Zan (1306-74), Rongxi Studio, Yuan-Ming, dated 1372 Portrait of the Ming Hongzhi Emperor, Ming 15th c. Ming dynasty 1366-1644 • Forces the Mongols out • Enlarging the Great Wall of China • Sent expeditions in the Indian Ocean • Built the imperial palace in Beijing • First Ming emperor established ceramic productions at Jingdezhen; High grade porcelain were produced for his court. • Later the emperors had monopoly over the utilitarian production of ceramics that were exported to SEA, the Middle East and later to the West • Blue ( water and cobalt oxide) and white (glaze) porcelains are underglazes 4.26 porcelain vases painted in an underglaze of cobalt blue, Ming dy., 15th century Vase, Ming dynasty, 15th c Porcelain bowl, Ming dy. 15th century 4-27 Chest, Ming dy., 15th century, lacquer 4-28 Wen Zhengming (1470-1559), Cypress and Rock, dated 1550 4-28 Wen Zhengming (1470-1559), Cypress and Rock, dated 1550, Ming Dy. 4-29 Don Qichang, Landscape in the Manner of Old Masters, 1611, Ming Dy., Zhu Da, Fish and Rocks, (1626-1705), Ming-Qing dy. Qing dynasty 1644-1911 • China was occupied by foreigners from the north-the Manchus or Manchurians, who caputured Beijing in 1644 • Qing means “pure’ or “clear” • Qianlong emperor (1736-1795) supported the revival of traditional art from the past. • Shitao (1641-1717) 4-33 Shitao, View of Waterfall on Mt. Lu, Qing dy. (1641-1717) Anon., Beauty Before a Curio Case, Qing, 18th century (one of set of 12 hanging scrolls Zheng Xie (1693-1765), Ink, bamboo and Rocks, Qing, 1753 4-32 Yu the Great Taming the Waters, completed 1787, jade (224 x 96 cm.) 4-36 Color print from woodblock, 1734