38 Facts About Chinese art

1.

Chinese art is visual art that originated in or is practiced in Greater China.

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2.

Chinese art is marked by an unusual degree of continuity within, and consciousness of, tradition, lacking an equivalent to the Western collapse and gradual recovery of Western classical styles of art.

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3.

Traditional Chinese art painting involves essentially the same techniques as Chinese art calligraphy and is done with abrush dipped in black or colored ink; oils are not used.

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4.

Much of what is known of early Chinese art figure painting comes from burial sites, where paintings were preserved on silk banners, lacquered objects, and tomb walls.

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5.

Chinese art jade was attributed with magical powers, and was used in the Stone and Bronze Ages for large and impractical versions of everyday weapons and tools, as well as the bi disks and cong vessels.

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6.

Chinese art architecture refers to a style of architecture that has taken shape in East Asia over many centuries.

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7.

The structural principles of Chinese art architecture have remained largely unchanged, the main changes being only the decorative details.

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8.

Since the Tang Dynasty, Chinese art architecture has had a major influence on the architectural styles of Korea, Vietnam, and Japan.

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9.

Chinese art architecture stresses the visual impact of the width of the buildings.

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10.

Much of the knowledge about early Chinese art architecture was passed on from one tradesman to his son or associative apprentice.

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11.

The study of early Chinese bronze casting is a specialized field of art history.

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12.

One of the earliest known depictions of a landscape in Chinese art comes from a pair of hollow-tile door panels from a Western Han dynasty tomb near Zhengzhou, dated 60 BC.

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13.

However, the oldest known landscape Chinese art scene tradition in the classical sense of painting is a work by Zhan Ziqian of the Sui dynasty .

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14.

The ancient Chinese art believe that mirror can act as a representation of the reality, which could make them more aware of the current situation;, mirrors are used as a media to convey or present a reflection of the past events.

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15.

Chinese art wrote three books about painting theory: On Painting, Introduction of Famous Paintings of Wei and Jin Dynasties and Painting Yuntai Mountain .

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16.

Chinese art confiscated Buddhist possessions and forced the faith to go underground, therefore affecting the ulterior development of the religion and its arts in China.

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17.

One of the most famous Buddhist Chinese art pagodas is the Giant Wild Goose Pagoda, built in 652 AD.

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18.

Chinese art was known for both figure and landscape paintings, and exemplified the elegant style which would become the standard for brush painting in China over the next 900 years.

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19.

Chinese art's only painting in existence is Strolling About In Spring arranged mountains perspectively.

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20.

Chinese art called himself "Madman Liang", and he spent his life drinking and painting.

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21.

Chinese art could hold two brushes in one hand and paint two different distanced bamboos simultaneously.

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22.

Chinese art did not need to see the bamboo while he painted them because he had seen a lot of them.

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23.

Chinese art was famous for reviving and reproducing a more Tang dynasty style of painting.

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24.

Chinese art porcelain is made from a hard paste made of the clay kaolin and a feldspar called petuntse, which cements the vessel and seals any pores.

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25.

Chinese art painting from 1664 by the Qing dynasty painter, Kun Can.

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26.

Under efforts of masters from this school, traditional Chinese art reached another climax and continued to the present in forms of "Chinese painting", or guohua for short.

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27.

The Shanghai School challenged and broke the literati tradition of Chinese art, while paying technical homage to the ancient masters and improving on existing traditional techniques.

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28.

Chinese art's paintings used bold colors and energetic brush strokes, making them more accessible to the general public.

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29.

Chinese art was innovative in that he intended to use his paintings to highlight national issues, a medium for positive change in society.

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30.

Chinese art believed that Chinese art could be rejuvenated by employing the reality-oriented art techniques of Europe.

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31.

Western Chinese art forms, including Cubism, Fauvism, Abstraction, and Expressionism were deemed superficial and were categorized as formalism.

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32.

Chinese art was an active participant in the revolutionary movement of Sun Yat-sen ??? .

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33.

Chinese art's started receiving international recognition in 1946, when Michael Sullivan began praising and writing about her work.

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34.

Contemporary Chinese art often referred to as Chinese avant-garde art, continued to develop since the 1980s as an outgrowth of modern art developments post-Cultural Revolution.

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35.

The Voice of America reported in 2006 that modern Chinese art is raking in record prices both internationally and in domestic markets, some experts even fearing the market might be overheating.

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36.

The Economist reported that Chinese art has become the latest darling in the world market according to the record sales from Sotheby's and Christie's, the biggest fine-art auction houses.

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37.

Sotheby's noted that contemporary Chinese art has rapidly changed the contemporary Asian art world into one of the most dynamic sectors on the international art market.

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38.

Centuries largely made-up of European and American buyers, the international buying market for Chinese art has begun to be dominated by Chinese dealers and collectors in recent years.

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