Chinese Paintings

A LOOK AT

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE ART OF CHINESE PAINTING

PAINTING MEDIUMS

Traditional Chinese paintings are often executed using a brush, colored pigments, black ink, and materials such as paper and silk as the “canvas”. Note that oil paints are not used in Chinese paintings.

TECHNIQUES

The two primary techniques used in Chinese painting include Gongbi, which is more refined and shuǐ-mò, which is executed in ink and wash and referred to as “literati painting”.

EXPLORE SOME OF THE MOST FAMOUS CHINESE PAINTINGS

Flower Study (17th century)  by Yun Bing

Funeral Banner of Lady Dai (c. 160 BCE) by Unknown Artist

Five Oxen (Tang Dynasty)  by Han Huang

Court Ladies Adorning Their Hair with Flowers (8th – 9th Century CE)  by Zhou Fang

A Solitary Temple Amid Clearing Peaks (c. 960 – 1127)  by Li Cheng

Li Bai Strolling (Song Dynasty)  by Liang Kai

A Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains (1113)  by Wang Ximeng

Nymph of the Luo River (c. 1150 – 1250)  by Gu Kaizhi

Ten Kings of Hell (c. 1195)  by Jin Chushi

Plum Blossoms in Early Spring (Yuan Dynasty)  by Wang Mian

Landscape album (1699)  by Bada Shanren

Portrait of Houqua (c. 1840)  by Tingqua

Eagle on A Pine Tree (1940)  by Qi Baishi