Chinese art by medium and technique
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File:Liang Wudi.jpg, Taipei.]]
Much traditional Chinese art was made for the imperial court, often to be then redistributed as gifts. As well as Chinese painting, sculpture and Chinese calligraphy, there are a great range of what may be called decorative or applied arts. Chinese fine art is distinguished from Chinese folk art, which differs in its style and purpose. This article gives an overview of the many different applied arts of China.
Calligraphy
{{main|Chinese calligraphy}}
The Chinese imperial court collected calligraphy pieces from the most skilled calligraphers in the country. The collection contains many masterpieces made by well-known calligraphers throughout Chinese art history. Furthermore, because of calligraphy's high artistic value, calligraphy collecting was popular among several Chinese emperors in multiple dynasties.
File:Ouyang Xun Bu Shang Tie.jpg|Bu Shang Tie by Ouyang Xun, Palace Museum, Beijing
File:Crossing the Frozen River.jpg|Crossing the Frozen River, a poem in running script by Kangxi Emperor (1654–1722), Palace Museum, Beijing
File:Calligraphy on fan by Mo Shilong, China, Ming dynasty, 16th century, ink on gold paper, Honolulu Academy of Arts.JPG|Calligraphy on fan by Mo Shilong, China, Ming dynasty, 16th century, ink on gold paper, Honolulu Academy of Arts
File:Su shi-calligraphy.jpg|The Cold Food Observance (detail), ink on paper, by Su Shi, National Palace Museum, Taipei
Ceramics
{{main|Chinese ceramics}}
Chinese ceramics, whose history originates back to the pre-dynastic periods, has continuously improved since then, and it is one of the most significant forms of Chinese art.
File:Yellow dragon jar (cropped).JPG|Yellow dragon jar, Ming dynasty. 1521–1567. Palace Museum, Beijing.
File:Dish with underglazed blue and overglazed red design of clouds and dragons, Jingdezhen ware, Yongzheng reign 1723-1735, Qing, Shanghai Museum.jpg|Dish with underglazed blue and overglazed red design of clouds and dragons, Jingdezhen ware, Yongzheng period (1723–1735), Qing dynasty, Shanghai Museum
File:SancaiHorseTang7-8thCentury.JPG|Sancai glazed ceramic horse, Tang dynasty, 7th–8th century, Musée Guimet
File:Chinese jar, Ming dynasty, Jiajing period (1521-1567), porcelain, HAA.JPG|Chinese jar, Ming dynasty, Jiajing period (1521–1567), porcelain, Honolulu Academy of Arts
File:Chinese glazed stoneware jar, Yuan dynasty, HAA.JPG|Chinese glazed stoneware jar, Yuan dynasty, Honolulu Academy of Arts
File:Blue glazed vase with golden medallion design.jpg|blue glazed vase with golden medallion design, Jingdezhen ware,1875–1908 A.D., a collection of Shanghai Museum
=Snuff bottle=
{{main|Snuff bottle}}
After opium was introduced to China, snuff bottles became popular. The Chinese royalties were addicted to them, as they used opium as a long-life medicine. The design of the snuff bottles flourished because of the money that the rich poured into the industry. Many of these bottles were made by talented artisans using tiny paints brushes; they were painted from inside of the bottle, reaching down from the top of the narrow neck. They are still highly collectible up to this day.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}}
File:Chinese snuff bottles.jpg|Chinese snuff bottles, various time periods, British Museum in London.
File:Chinese snuff bottle, 19th century, glass bottle with jadeite stopper, Honolulu Museum of Art II.JPG|Chinese snuff bottle, 19th century, glass bottle with jadeite stopper, Honolulu Museum of Art
Cloisonné
{{main|Cloisonné}}
File:Cloisonneqing.jpg|Cloisonne dish, Qing dynasty, Royal Museum, Edinburgh
File:Cloisonné Teller makffm 11420.jpg|Large gilded copper plate with cloisonné, Qing dynasty, 19th century, Museum für Angewandte Kunst, Frankfurt
File:Ming Pilgerflasche Museum Rietberg U 138.jpg|Pilgrim flask decorated with peaches and pomegranates; Ming dynasty, 1st half of 17th century, Museum Rietberg, Zurich
File:Qilin-shaped incense burner 1 CAC.JPG|Qilin-shaped incense burner (17th–18th centuries) on display at the Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts on the Stanford University campus in Stanford, California.
Engraving
File:Golden canteen with dragon, Ming Dynasty.jpg|A golden canteen made during the Chinese Ming dynasty, dated 15th century, Freer and Sackler Galleries, Washington D.C.
File:20080918094303!Red lacquer tray with gold engraving, Song Dynasty.jpg|A Chinese red lacquer tray over wood with engraved golden foil, from the Song dynasty (960–1279 AD), dated 12th to early 13th century. Freer and Sackler Galleries, Washington D.C.
Glassware
File:Nanyue flat blue glass.JPG|Blue glass plaques found in the Mausoleum of the Nanyue King, dating from late 2nd century BC.
File:Imperial Yellow Peking Glass Vase.jpg|Early 19th century Peking glass vase in Imperial Yellow.
Jewellery
File:Huan in shape of a coiled serpent.jpg|Huan in shape of a coiled serpent, jade ware, Eastern Han, Shanghai Museum
File:Forbiddencitypic23.jpg|Hair pin, art collection in the Palace Museum, Beijing
File:Chinese - Hair Ornament - Walters 8614.jpg|Hair ornament, 19th century, Walters Art Museum
File:Chinese - Ceremonial Headdress - Walters 863 - Three Quarter Left.jpg|Ceremonial headdress, 19th century, Walters Art Museum
File:QueensHeaddress.jpg|Chinese Imperial Queen's Headdress, Ming dynasty, Mings Tomb Museum
File:Dai necklace - Yunnan Provincial Museum- DSC02029.JPG|Dai necklace, metalwork, Yunnan Provincial Museum, Kunming, Yunnan
{{See also|Jewellery#China}}
Lacquer
{{main|Lacquerware#Chinese lacquerware|Carved lacquer}}
It was during the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE) when the sophisticated techniques used in the lacquer process were first developed, and it became a highly artistic craft.Webb, 2000. p. 3. Various prehistoric lacquerware have been unearthed in China dating back to the Neolithic period. The earliest extant lacquer object, a red wooden bowl,Stark, 2005. p. 30. was unearthed at a Hemudu culture (c. 5000–4500 BCE) site.Wang, 1982. p. 80. By the Han dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), many centers of lacquer production had become established. The knowledge of the Chinese methods focusing on the lacquer process spread from China during the Han, Tang, and Song dynasties. Later on, it was eventually introduced to the rest of the world—Korea, Japan, Southeast and South Asia.Institute, ed., 1983. p. 211.
File:Dish with Roses LACMA M.2005.57 (1 of 2).jpg|Carved lacquer tray with roses, Yuan dynasty, 16 cm across
File:MS-PerlmuttlackPäoniendose16Jh.JPG|Chinese mother of pearl lacquer box with peony decor, Ming dynasty, 16th century, Museum für Lackkunst, Münster (Germany)
File:Miscellany in the Villa Ephrussi de Rothschild - screen.jpg|Coromandel lacquer screen with figures in pavilions and a main border with a "hundred antiques".
File:FFM-QingRotlackDose.JPG|Chinese lacquerware box from the Qing dynasty, Museum für angewandte Kunst, Frankfurt, Germany
Painting
{{main|Chinese painting}}
File:庞掌运.png|Hanging scroll, color on silk, National Palace Museum, Taipei
File:Chinese, ‘Pink and White Lotus’, 14th century China, Yuan dynasty (1279–1368), Hanging scroll; mineral pigments on silk, Kimbell Art Museum.jpg| Pink and White Lotus, hanging scroll, 14th century China, Kimbell Art Museum
File:Ни Цзань.Дерево, бамбук и изящный камень. Гугун, Пекин..jpg|Wood, Bamboo, and Elegant Stone, Ni Zan, 1360s–1370s, Palace Museum
File:Guo Xi - Early Spring (large).jpg|Early Spring, Guo Xi, color on silk, National Palace Museum, Taipei
File:Li-tiefu-portrait-of-madame-liu.jpg|Portrait of Madame Liu, Li Tiefu, 1942, oil on canvas
File:Chen Chengpo 1933.jpg|Chen Cheng-po, 1933, canvas oil painting, Collection of Taiwan Museum of Fine Art
File:Songhuizong4.jpg|Golden pheasant and cotton rose, Zhao Ji, Palace Museum
File:Portrait of the Emperor Troating for Deer - detail.jpg|Portrait of the Emperor Troating for Deer, Giuseppe Castiglione, Palace Museum
Photography
{{main|Photography in China}}
After the invention of photography in 1839 and the arrival of European photographers in Macao, photography was soon introduced in several cities in China. At first, some people were reluctant because they thought that having the camera take a picture of them would result in their spirit being taken away. But, by the end of the nineteenth century, all major cities had photographic studios. Some affluent Chinese people even adopted photography as a hobby. Western and Chinese photographers documented ordinary street life, major wars, and prominent figures.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}}
File:The Cixi Imperial Dowager Empess of China (2).PNG|The Cixi Imperial Dowager Empress of China
File:Feb 23 1909 Pu Yi.jpg|Three-year-old Emperor of China Pu Yi, February 23, 1909, Library of Congress
The Empress Dowager Cixi had her portrait taken repeatedly.
Sculpture and carving
In the 18th century, a Qing dynasty covered vase depicting a woman holding a lingzhi fungus and a peony branch was created. The woman was also accompanied by a boy, a crane, and a deer as shown below.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}}
File:Covered Vase Decorated with Female Figure Holding Lingzhi Fungus and Peony Branch, Accompanied by a Boy, a Crane, and a Deer, China, Qing dynasty, 18th century, coral - Worcester Art Museum - IMG 7546.JPG|Covered Vase Decorated with Female Figure, Qing dynasty, 18th century, coral, Asian collection in the Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Massachusetts
File:Chinese - Guanyin Holding a Child - Walters 71656.jpg|The Chinese goddess of compassion, Guanyin, between 1580 and 1644, carved ivory, Walters Art Museum
{{See also|Terracotta Army}}
=Ivory carving=
{{main|Ivory carving}}
Ivory was not a prestigious material in the rather strict hierarchy of Chinese art, where jade had always been far more highly regarded, and rhinoceros horn (which was not ivory) had a special auspicious meaning.Rawson, 179–182. But ivory, as well as bone, had been used for various items since early times when China still had its own species of elephant. Demand for ivory seems to have played a large part in their extinction, which came before 100 BC. During the Ming dynasty, ivory began to be used for small statuettes of gods and others (see gallery). In the Qing dynasty, it suited the growing taste for intricate carving and became more prominently used for brush-holders, boxes, handles and similar pieces. Later on, Canton even developed large models of houses and other large and showy pieces, which remained popular.Rawson, 182. Enormous examples are still seen as decorative centrepieces at government receptions. Figures were typically uncoloured, or just with certain features coloured in ink which was often just black, but sometimes a few other colors.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}}
File:WenChang-MingDynasty-ROM-May8-08.png|Ivory figurine of Wen Chang, the "God of Literature". Circa 1550–1644, Ming dynasty, Royal Ontario Museum.
File:Romance of the Western Chamber fans Asian Art Museum SF 1992.93.1-2.JPG|A pair of ivory fans depicting scenes from Romance of the Western Chamber, c. 1800–1911, Qing dynasty. On display at the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco, California.
File:Ivory table screen, Qianlong reign period.JPG|A Chinese ivory table screen with carved decoration of an outdoor scene, from the Qing dynasty, dated to the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1735–1796).
=Government seals=
Seal knob (紐刻) is an art that originated in ancient China and is mainly popular in East Asian countries. It focuses or decorates on the head-part or the top-side of a seal. It is a kind of sculpture or mini-sculpture. In China, the utmost important seal of all is the imperial seal carved from the Heshibi, a sacred ceremonial jade. It was said that the green jade took the form of a round shape with inscriptions that read "Having received the Mandate from Heaven, may (the emperor) lead a long and prosperous life." (受命於天,既壽永昌) This was said to be written by the Primer Li Si for Qin Shi Huang Zhao Zheng, the Augustus Emperor of The Chinese Empire.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}}
File:Han Dynasty jade seal (governmental, officer).jpg|Knob of a governmental seal, Western Han dynasty.
=Ruyi=
{{main|Ruyi (scepter)}}
Ruyi is a scepter that serves primarily as a decoration. Its history began in the Qing dynasty when Ruyi scepters were given to noted visitors of the emperor. Now, they're given as birthday presents. Ruyi is made of different materials, including porcelain and jade. The term Ruyi means "may your wish be granted" or "as you wish". The unusual shape is meant to imitate the shape of a stemmed lotus flower.[http://www.gotheborg.com/glossary/?http://www.gotheborg.com/glossary/data/ruyi.shtml Ruyi] Gotheborg.com Retrieved 30 August 2012.
File:Forbiddencitypic17.jpg|A gold ruyi carved with flowers. Qing dynasty (1644–1911). Palace Museum, Beijing.
File:HB-Ruyi.JPG|Ruyi scepter, Qing dynasty, 18th century, Uberseemuseum, Bremen, Germany
File:Ornament with persimmon, lily & ruyi fungus Asian Art Museum SF B65J5a-b.JPG|Ornament with persimmon, lily and ruyi fungus, chalcedony, 1900–49, Qing dynasty or Republic period. On display at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.
=Stone carving=
File:20090822 Shanghai Museum 3452.jpg|Buddha statue, Tang dynasty (618–907 AD), Shanghai Museum
=Woodwork=
File:Kuan-yan bodhisattva, Northern Sung dynasty, China, c. 1025, wood, Honolulu Academy of Arts.jpg|Kuan-yan bodhisattva, Northern Sung dynasty, China, c. 1025, wood, Honolulu Academy of Arts
File:Chinese bamboo carving0.jpg|Chinese bamboo carving, Qing dynasty, c.1900
File:Chinese - Portable Buddhist Shrine - Walters 61266 - Front Open.jpg|Portable Buddhist Shrine, 10th century, carved wood, Walters Art Museum
Textile arts
=Embroidery=
Chinese embroidery is one of the oldest extant needlework. The four major regional styles of Chinese embroidery are Suzhou (Su Xiu), Hunan (Xiang Xiu), Guangdong (Yue Xiu) and Sichuan (Shu Xiu). All of them are nominated as Chinese Intangible Cultural Heritage.{{citation needed|date=August 2012}}
File:Qing-Purple-canpoy-with-magic-fungi-design-3981.jpg|Qing dynasty purple canopy with a magic fungi design, Museum gallery, Beijing's Palace Museum
File:WLA vanda Court robe for a woman of the Imperial Family.jpg|Embroidered silk, 1770–1820, Qing dynasty
File:Golden pheasant rank badge, 2nd rank civil servant, Qing Dynasty, Denver Art Museum.jpg|Golden pheasant rank badge, 2nd rank civil servant, silk tapestry with painted details. China, Qing dynasty, late 18th – early 19th century. Denver Art Museum
File:Qifu late 19th or early 20th century, Honolulu Academy of Arts.jpg|Detail of qifu (imperial dragon robe), late 19th or early 20th century, silk, gilt thread, twill and damask weave, embroidery, Honolulu Academy of Arts
File:Woman's summer robe Asian Art Museum SF 2004.36 central embroidery detail.JPG|Detail of the central embroidery work of a woman's summer robe, silk gauze, c. 1875–1900, Qing dynasty. On display at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco.
File:Chinese summer court robe ('dragon robe'), c. 1890s, silk gauze couched in gold thread, East-West Center.jpg|Chinese summer court robe ("dragon robe"), c. 1890s, silk gauze couched in gold thread, East-West Center
File:Drachenrobe-Qianlong.JPG|Dragon robe of the Qianlong Emperor (1736–1796), 18th century, Grassi Museum, Leipzig, Germany
=Rugs=
File:Forbidden City art collection pic 6.jpg|A room with traditional Chinese wedding decorations and rugs, Forbidden City in Beijing
File:Forbiddencityroompic1.jpg|A room with blue patterned carpet and hanging dragon rug, Forbidden City, Beijing
=Woven material=
File:Qifu late 19th or early 20th century, Honolulu Academy of Arts.jpg|Detail of qifu (imperial dragon robe), late 19th or early 20th century, silk, gilt thread, twill and damask weave, embroidery, Honolulu Academy of Arts
File:Woven material - Yunnan Nationalities Museum - DSC04067.JPG|Dai woven textile, weaving collection, Yunnan Nationalities Museum, Kunming, Yunnan, China.
See also
{{commons category|Art of China}}
{{div col|colwidth=22em}}
- Academies
- China Academy of Art
- China Central Academy of Fine Arts
- Hubei Institute of Fine Arts
- Chinese architecture
- Chinese Folk Art
- Chinese furniture
- Chinese garden
- Collections of fine art in China
- National Art Museum of China
- National Museum of China
- National Palace Museum, Taipei
- Forbidden City (Palace Museum)
- Summer Palace, Beijing
{{div col end}}
References
{{reflist|30em}}
Bibliography
- Chang, Zonglin. Li, Xukui. (2006). Aspect of Chinese culture. 中国文化导读. 清华大学出版社 publishing
- Institute of the History of Natural Sciences and Chinese Academy of Sciences, ed. (1983). Ancient China's technology and science. Beijing: Foreign Languages Press. {{ISBN|978-0-8351-1001-3}}.
- Rawson, Jessica (ed). (2007). The British Museum Book of Chinese Art, (2nd edn). British Museum Press. {{ISBN|978-0-7141-2446-9}}
- Stark, Miriam T. (2005). Archaeology of Asia. Malden, MA : Blackwell Pub. {{ISBN|1-4051-0213-6}}.
- Wang, Zhongshu. (1982). Han Civilization. Translated by K.C. Chang and Collaborators. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. {{ISBN|0-300-02723-0}}.
- Webb, Marianne (2000). Lacquer: Technology and conservation. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann. {{ISBN|978-0-7506-4412-9}}.
Further reading
- {{cite book | title= Art Reboot | location=Hong Kong/UK | publisher=OM Publishing | year=2022 | isbn=978-9-6279-5647-1|url=https://paviliongallery.com/catalogues/pavilion-summer-2022-4f5fj}}