China and Korea Flashcards

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Guang with Tiger and Owl Décor, Shang dynasty, 13th century BCE

found in burial sites: ritual pouring vessels- ceremonial activities- ritualistic libations from animal forms

in West- “ryton”- associated with Middle Eastern, Sumerian culture- bulls or other symbols of royal power imbibed taken into oneself to receive animal’s power

here: largest cat on earth- tiger- in head/body; rear portion of owl= hunting life of Sheng

notion of hunting/warfare in art dominant in other cultures- Mongols, Muslims, etc.

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Ceramic Soldiers, The mausoleum of Emperor Shihuangdi, Lintong, Shaanxi. Qin dynasty, c. 210 BCE.

1974, peasants digging found mausoleum- one of the most important archaelogical finds of the 20th c.

underground army of 8000 terracotta soldiers, 100 life-sized ceramic horses- all in military formation, facing east (sun rises=renewal) with weapons; detailed physiognomy, idiosyncratic

tomb mound unexcavated but believed to reproduce world as known to Qin- stars overhead, rivers, moiuntains below- like Egyptians & Etruscans ensure undeworld match human world with everything needed for immortality

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Painted Banner, from the tomb of the Marquess of Dai, Mawangdui, Changsha, Hunan. Han dynasty, c. 160 BCE

colors on silk, all items shown reference actual burial practices; end of mythocentric age (belief in close relationship b/w human & supernatural)- mythocentric age seen in Egypt and retained in West (Giotto- The Last Judgment- 1305)

worldview: heaven, earth, underworld; largest section is heaven itself- sun=mythical crow; moon=mythical toad; torch dragon= primordial deity of man w/ serpent tail

gate w/ 2 guardian figures, dragons: intertwine, loops through circular jade piece, forms bi=symbol of heaven

deceased + 3 attendants on platform, 2 kneeling attendants welcome him into heaven

below: earthly, underworld realms: bronze bells, stone chimes, ritual bronze vessels, music, food, wine for deceased

muscula man holds up platform on pair of fish (in bi shape) fish/other creatures in underworld

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Altar to Amitabha Buddha, Sui dynasty, 593.

New Sui emperor- devout Buddhist- new style fusing Indian, central Asian, Chinese styles; most popular sect in China & Japan- Amitabha Buddha in Western Pure Land- paradise promised to followers w/ rebirth, message of salvation

7 celestial figures- incense burner below; Amitabha (flame halo) in paradise, seated on lotus throne under trees, flanked by elongated, sensual Bodhisattvas, including Guaryin w/ pomegranate

lions below (Buddha’s sermon), + 2 smaller bodhisattvas, Buddha- “have no fear” mudra, topknot, monk’s robe

combines sensuality of India, schematic abstraction of central Asia, linear grace/rhythm of Chinese

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The Western Paradise Of Amitabha Buddha, Detail of a wall painting in Cave 217, Dunhuang, Gansu. Tang dynasty, c. 750.

along Silk Road, 500 caves- carved painted clay sculpture, wall paintings- worked on over 1000-year period

most popular wall painting from Tang dynasty; Amitabha Buddha seated with flame halo, surrounded by boddhisattvas

architecture modeled on Tang palaces (cantilevered, overhanging roofs)- Buddha’s image of Nirvana anchored in the here and now

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6
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Great Wild Goose Pagoda at Ci’en Temple, Chang’an, Shanxi. Tang dynasty, first erected 645; rebuilt mid 8th century CE

Chinese adapt architectural structures from S. Asia: Indian Buddhist stupa + Chinese watchtower (cantilevered, overhanging eaves)= stone pagoda

built for monk Xuanzang (600-64) upon return from 16-year pilgrimage to India- translated Buddhist scriptures for Chinese

entirely in brick, but imitates wooden architecture, walls resemble bays, bracket systems reproduced under roofs

Tang ideals- simplicity, symmetry, proportions, grace- tame flamboyant flourishes of earlier Buddhist architecture

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Seated Guanyin Bodhisattva, Liao dynasty, 11th-12th century CE (the painting and gilding were restored in the 16th century).

Guanyin popular in China- Bodhissatva of Infinite Compassion- appears in many guises- here Water & Mood Guanyin (sits on rock by sea, steps on lotus)

elegant attire, jewelry, crown; wood carving- removing unwanted material from sculpture- subtractive process- but outside dried faster= cracks; Chinese solved problem w/ joined-block construction- pieces carved separately and assembled w/ dowels, nails, whole piece hollowed out, polychromed/painted

positon of royal ease- w/ right arm on raised right knee, left arm/foot hang down=royal sophistication, sensuous languor- inspired by Indian bodhisattvas (5th century)

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8
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Fan Kuan, Travelers among Mountains and Streams, Northern Song dynasty, early 11th century CE. hanging scroll with ink colors on silk

progress of Chinese art from mythocentrism (Han)- religious images/human actions (Sui)-aesthetic/avoidance of human condition- ideals through symbolism- use landscape- most esteemed subject- does not show supernatural; careful study of species but not topographically accurate

acts of drama: each introduced next: foreground: low lying rock formation, middle ground: travelers/mules, waterfall spanned by bridge, background: mountain rising from mist; human scale- smallness vs. vastness of nature; vastness also by avoidance of perspective

like Western- personal experience of nature (God’s creation)= understanding of divine

feeling- climbing mountain, leave human world, face-to-face w/ Great Ultimate (taiji); Daoist ideal: nature uncorrupted by humans

central peak flanked by lesser peaks= emperor & ministers (Confucian) or Buddha & bodhisattvas (Buddhist)

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Zhao Mengfu, Autumn Colors On The Qiao And Hua Mountains, Yuan dynasty, 1296

descendant of Song painter, calligrapher & poet; served in Yuan govt, influenced younger artists

handscroll w/ink & color on paper, shifting perspective illustrated as unroll by section from right to left

style: Archaic, elegant, Tang dynasty style- nostalgic for China’s distant past, military/cultural power

“literati” painting: “spirit of antiquity”- unassuming brushwork, subtle colors (or only ink), landscape as personal message (usually for close friend)

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10
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Ni Zan, The Rongxi Studio, Yuan dynasty, 1372

Zhao’s ideas serve as model; most famous painting entirely in ink; motifs of Chinese landscape- mountains, rivers, waterfalls, trees, rocks, temples, boats, etc.

reduces detail further- open areas of negative space, less descriptive, dry-brush technique (brush lightly inked, let run out, white paper “breathes” through ragged strokes)

technique adopted by later painters, he was model for literati painters- eccentric- notoriously clean (washed several X perday, had trees washed), wealthy, at end of life gave away possessions, became hermit

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11
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Forbidden City (Now the Palace Museum), Beijing. Mostly Ming dynasty.

Palace complex surrounded by moats & towers; like Angkor Wat; enter through Meridian gate; perpendicular, easily defensible side wings like Versailles, courtyard crossed by bow-shaped waterway, spanned by 5 arched, marble bridges

5: elements of nature- earth achieves stability through balance of elements; past bridges to Gate of Supreme Harmony- opens onto larger courtyard w/ 3 ceremonial halls raised on platform

lion statues= royalty; emperor sat on throne, facing south, overlooking all below=structure of universe & heaven; emperor=son of Heaven, maintain cosmic order from throne in middle of world

city is heaven on earth

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12
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Shen Zhou, Poet On A Mountaintop, Leaf from an album of landscapes; painting mounted as part of a handscroll. Ming dynasty, c. 1500.

very influential type of painting; invented motif- poet surveying a landscape on a mountain plateau

dry-brush technique- similar amateur, individualized brushwork- informal, relaxed, straightforward

previously landscape dominated- now poet dominates- clouds beneath

reflects Ming philopsophy- mind not physical world is basis for reality

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13
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Shitao, Landscape, Leaf from an Album of Landscapes. Qing dynasty, c. 1700

ink and color on paper- artist descended from 1st Ming emperor, with Qing takeover, refuge in Buddhist temples; Qing dangerous for those in Ming circles- many committed suicide/hid in monasteries

painters expressed anger, defiance, frustration, melancholy in art; individualists: expression of personal feelings; brink of abstraction

same Ming subject- scholar in structure on mountain, but progress through painting differently, dry-brush, loose, suggestive, not detailed- like Ni Zan & Zen Buddhism

dots not longer indicate vegetation or rocks- life of their own, overwhelming- monk not dominate landscape-swallowed by it

new literati painting to differentiate from carefully defined Qing court style

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14
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Wu Guanzhong, Pine Spirit, 1984

founder of modern Chinese painting; combined French training w/ Chinese background- semiabstract style for landscape

preliminary sketches on site (en plein air like Courbet); finish composition in studio w/ free interpretations based on feeling and his vision

rhythmic underlying abstraction of landscape but not topographically accurate; traditionally Chinese calligraphy, landscapes & subject matter combined w/ new abstract, modern style

subject is Yellow Mountains- can see craggy outcrops but expressionistic, conceptual like Kandinsky, landscape not shown from unified viewpoint, suggested

AbEx like Pollock but tied to tradition- dry-brush technique, rapid painting, expressing emotions= literati- from Ming period- Shen Zhou

landscape still important subject for modern Chinese painters + calligraphy

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