Chinese
Landscape Painting
On a recent trip to China, I was lucky
enough to see some fine examples of Chinese landscape painting. Art is
much revered in China and they are very proud of the masters of the
ancient past. Museums and galleries take great care in preserving and
displaying beautiful paintings. I was also able to see some of the
scenery depicted in the paintings, mostly glimpsed from train windows.
The Chinese landscape was an inspiration to the poets of the past too,
poetry being another important part of Chinese culture. In fact the
actual landscape, poetry, painting, pottery and calligraphy all seem to
complement each other. The rest of the world discovered Chinese
landscape painting, when the trading routes were established. It was
fashionable in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, for the
aristocracy in the UK to collect Chinese landscape painting and pottery
and show it off in their stately homes.
The Chinese landscape, and therefore the Chinese landscape painting are
unique. There is a combination of mountains, forest and water that
can't be found anywhere else. There are several movements, known as art
dynasties, most of them enduring for hundreds of years. Royal court
officials and members of the aristocracy in ancient times, were often
gifted in calligraphy and painting. Painters worked on silk and then
paper became popular after it was invented in the first century.
As from the Tang Dynasty, (618-907), the main subject of painting was
the landscape. This school of art was given the name shanshui, which
translates as mountain water. This Chinese landscape painting was
impressionistic, rather than an attempt to depict realistic detail. The
traditional method used in Chinese landscape painting was the same
technique to be found in calligraphy, of a paintbrush and black, or
sometimes colored ink. Oils were not introduced until much later. The
paintings were then usually transferred to scrolls, but could also be
displayed on beautiful lacquer work or on walls. Europeans did not
paint landscapes until after the 17th century, and so most experts
believe that the very first landscape painting was created in China.
Different art movements developed over the years in Chinese landscape
painting, often influenced by the principles of Buddhism. A wider use
of the color palette was used during the Ming Dynasty, and advances in
color printing were made in the 1600's.
Unfortunately, with modern day China in the relentless march to
industrialization, the landscape is taking a battering. Industry
desperately needs energy, and scenic countryside is often sacrificed in
the quest for more coal and timber. My train journeys also bore
testimony to this, as I saw the countryside being unceremoniously
carved up with no thought to the legacy left behind. For me, it makes
the Chinese landscape painting all the more significant. The paintings
capture a more romantic past. They are a time capsule of a unique
landscape that is disappearing fast.
|
|