Presentation on the topic of art of ancient China. Artistic culture of Medieval China, presentation for a lesson on the Moscow Art and Culture (grade 10) on the topic


The Birth of Chinese Painting

  • tradition attributes the creation of Chinese painting to four founding fathers:
  • Gu Kaizhi (344 - 406)
  • Lu Tanwei (mid 5th century)
  • Zhang Sengyao (ca. 500 - ca. 550)
  • Wu Daozi (680 - 740)
  • However, as a result of archaeological research, today's scientists push back the birth of Chinese painting 1000 years earlier, to the era of the warring states of Zhang Guo

Main genres of Chinese painting

  • A genre of plant painting, in particular bamboo painting. The founder of bamboo painting was Wen Tong.
  • Painting of Flowers and Birds.
  • Mountain Scenery (山水, shan shui, i.e. "mountains and waters").
  • Animalistic genre (翎毛. ling mao. those. "feathered and furry").
  • Portrait genre

Gu Kaizhi: six laws - "loofah"

  • Shen - spirituality,
  • Tianqu - naturalness,
  • Goutu - composition of a painting,
  • Gusyan is the constant basis, that is, the structure of the work,
  • Mose - following tradition, ancient monuments,
  • Yunbi - high technique of writing with ink and brush

Emperor-artist

  • Zhu Zhanji(1398-1435) - Emperor of China of the Ming Dynasty. He succeeded his father Zhu Gaochi to the throne. His motto was "Proclamation of Virtue"


A pagoda is a type of monumental Buddhist religious building, originated in India

  • Buddhism penetrated into China during the reign of the Han Emperor Mindi (58 - 75), in 68 the first Buddhist temple was built - Baimasy (in Luoyang), and in the era of the Three Kingdoms (220 - 265) - the first pagoda

Pagoda shapes

  • Pagodas in China come in a wide variety of shapes - square, hexagonal, octagonal, usually with an even number of corners and multi-tiered. Their building materials are wood, brick, stone, glazed tiles, and iron. By their design, they look like towers or pavilions with numerous cornices

Bamboo books

  • From the beginning of the 1st millennium BC. e. The Chinese began to use bamboo slats for writing. Each such tablet contained approximately forty hieroglyphs (words). The planks were strung on a rope and connected into bundles

  • In the 3rd century. BC e. The Chinese began to use silk for writing.
  • They painted on silk with natural paints using a special brush, the invention of which is credited Myn Tianyu

Invention of paper

  • The great invention was paper making, whose production began in 105 AD. It was cooked from tree bark, rags, and hemp. The author of this largest discovery in the history of mankind was an official Cai Lun. Around the same time, mascara was created

Hieroglyphs

  • IN Chinese number in dictionaries hieroglyphs sometimes reaches 70 thousand

Symbol of happiness

  • The symbol of happiness in ancient China was the bat.
  • Five bats meant many lucky blessings, most notably longevity, wealth, health, good behavior and natural death

Great Chinese wall

  • Construction of the first wall began in the 3rd century BC. e. during the reign of the emperor Qin Shi Huangdi to protect the state from attacks by the nomadic Xiongnu people. A fifth of the then population of the country, that is, about a million people, took part in the construction
  • The length of the wall with all branches is 8 thousand 851 kilometers and 800 meters
  • The length of the wall itself from edge to edge is two thousand five hundred kilometers
  • The width of the Great Wall is 5-8 meters and the height is 6.6 meters (in some areas the height reaches 10 meters)

Poetry of Tao Yuan Ming

“In the world, human life has no deep roots.

It will flutter away like light dust over the road...

I want one thing - not to know old age,

So that my relatives gather under one roof,

Each of my sons and grandsons are all in a hurry to help each other...”


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The presentation on the topic “Chinese painting” can be downloaded absolutely free on our website. Project subject: MHC. Colorful slides and illustrations will help you engage your classmates or audience. To view the content, use the player, or if you want to download the report, click on the corresponding text under the player. The presentation contains 12 slide(s).

Presentation slides

Slide 1

Slide 2

There are discrepancies regarding the origin of this art. Tradition itself attributes the creation of Chinese painting to four founding fathers: Gu Kaizhi (Chinese: 顧愷之) (344 - 406), Lu Tanwei (Chinese: 陆探微, mid-5th century), Zhang Sengyao (c. 500 - c. 550). ) and Wu Daozi (Chinese: 吴道子, 680 - 740), who lived from the 5th to the 8th centuries AD.

Slide 3

The second famous representative of the “painting of intellectuals,” the famous landscape painter Guo Xi, in his treatise “On Painting,” considers the painting to be unique psychological portrait the author, emphasizing the high meaning of the artist’s personality and nobility. The artist especially emphasizes the need for perfection of the master’s personality. He considers poetry to be another important aspect of a work of painting, citing a phrase belonging to an unknown author: “Poetry is painting without form; painting is poetry taken form.”

Slide 4

Since the time of the artist Wang Wei (8th century), many “intellectual artists” have given preference to monochrome ink painting over flowers, believing that: “Among the ways of a painter, simple ink is superior to all. He will reveal the essence of nature, he will complete the work of the creator.” It was during this period that the main genres of Chinese painting emerged: The genre of plant painting, in particular bamboo painting. The founder of bamboo painting was Wen Tong.

Slide 5

Since the birth of Chinese painting on silk and paper in the 5th century AD. e. Many authors have attempted to theorize painting. The first among all, perhaps, was Gu Kaizhi, at whose suggestion six laws were formulated - “loofa”: Shenqi - spirituality, Tianqu - naturalness, Goutu - the composition of a painting, Guxiang - a constant basis, that is, the structure of the work, Mose - following tradition , ancient monuments, Yunbi - high technique of writing with ink and brush.

Slide 6

Chinese painting after the Song era

The reigns of the Tang and Song dynasties are considered the time of greatest flowering of Chinese culture. The same can be said about Chinese painting. Throughout the subsequent Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, artists were guided by samples from the Song period. Unlike the Tang and Song artists, painters of subsequent eras did not strive to create new styles, but, on the contrary, imitated in every possible way the styles of bygone eras. And they often did it at a very good level, like the artists of the Mongol Yuan dynasty that followed the Song era.

Slide 7

Chinese painting of the 18th – 20th centuries. An era of change.

The 16th - 17th centuries turned out to be an era of great changes for China, and not only because of the Manchu conquest. With the beginning of the colonial era, China began to become increasingly exposed to the cultural influence of Europeans. A reflection of this fact was the transformation of Chinese painting. One of the most interesting Chinese artists of the Qing era is Giuseppe Castiglione (1688 - 1766), an Italian Jesuit monk, missionary and court artist and architect in China. It was this man who became the first artist to combine Chinese and European traditions in his drawing.

Slide 8

The 19th and 20th centuries became a great test of strength for China. China has entered an era of change on a scale never before seen. During the 19th century, China lost 2 opium wars to European colonialists and suffered significant devastation from the Europeans. In 1894 - 1895, China lost the war to Japan and was divided into zones of influence between the European colonial empires (including Russia), the USA and Japan.

Slide 9

However, the most striking personality in Chinese painting of the 20th century was undoubtedly Qi Baishi (1864 - 1957), who combined two previously incompatible biographical features for a Chinese artist; he was an adherent of “painting of intellectuals” and at the same time came from a poor peasant family. Qi Baishi also received wide recognition in the West, and in 1955 he was awarded the International Peace Prize.

Slide 10

Chinese oil painting

Today, many Chinese artists prefer European oil and canvas, instead of traditional ink, watercolor paints and thin bamboo and rice paper. The beginning of Chinese oil painting was laid by the Italian Jesuit monk D. Castiglione.

Slide 11

Symbolism in Chinese painting

Chinese painting is also characterized by an extremely elegant language of images. Often depicting something, a Chinese artist puts a certain subtext into the drawing. Some images are particularly common, for example, four noble plants: orchid, bamboo, chrysanthemum, meihua plum. In addition, each of these plants correlates with certain quality character. The orchid is delicate and sophisticated, associated with the tenderness of early spring. Bamboo is a symbol of unyielding character, a true husband of tall moral qualities(Xunzi). Chrysanthemum is beautiful, chaste and modest, the embodiment of the triumph of autumn. The blooming wild plum meihua is associated with purity of thoughts and resistance to the adversities of fate. In plant subjects, other symbolism is also found: for example, when painting a lotus flower, the artist talks about a person who has retained purity of thoughts and wisdom, living in a stream of everyday problems.

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  • Slide 1

    Slide 2

    There are discrepancies regarding the origin of this art. Tradition itself attributes the creation of Chinese painting to four founding fathers: Gu Kaizhi (Chinese: 顧愷之) (344 - 406), Lu Tanwei (Chinese: 陆探微, mid-5th century), Zhang Sengyao (ca. 500 - ca. 550). ) and Wu Daozi (Chinese: 吴道子, 680 - 740), who lived from the 5th to the 8th centuries AD.

    Slide 3

    The second famous representative of “painting of intellectuals,” the famous landscape painter Guo Xi, in his treatise “On Painting,” considers the painting to be a kind of psychological portrait of the author, emphasizing the high meaning of the artist’s personality and nobility. The artist especially emphasizes the need for perfection of the master’s personality. He considers poetry to be another important aspect of a work of painting, citing a phrase belonging to an unknown author: “Poetry is painting without form; painting is poetry taken form.”

    Slide 4

    Since the time of the artist Wang Wei (8th century), many “intellectual artists” have given preference to monochrome ink painting over flowers, believing that: “Among the ways of a painter, simple ink is superior to all. He will reveal the essence of nature, he will complete the work of the creator.” It was during this period that the main genres of Chinese painting emerged: The genre of plant painting, in particular bamboo painting. The founder of bamboo painting was Wen Tong.

    Slide 5

    Since the birth of Chinese painting on silk and paper in the 5th century AD. e. Many authors have attempted to theorize painting. The first among all, perhaps, was Gu Kaizhi, at whose suggestion six laws were formulated - “loofa”: Shenqi - spirituality, Tianqu - naturalness, Goutu - the composition of a painting, Guxiang - a constant basis, that is, the structure of the work, Mose - following tradition , ancient monuments, Yunbi - high technique of writing with ink and brush.

    Slide 6

    Chinese painting after the Song era The periods of the Tang and Song dynasties are considered the time of the highest flowering of Chinese culture. The same can be said about Chinese painting. Throughout the subsequent Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties, artists were guided by samples from the Song period. Unlike the Tang and Song artists, painters of subsequent eras did not strive to create new styles, but, on the contrary, imitated in every possible way the styles of bygone eras. And they often did it at a very good level, like the artists of the Mongol Yuan dynasty that followed the Song era.

    Slide 7

    Chinese painting of the 18th – 20th centuries. An era of change. The 16th - 17th centuries turned out to be an era of great changes for China, and not only because of the Manchu conquest. With the beginning of the colonial era, China began to become increasingly exposed to the cultural influence of Europeans. A reflection of this fact was the transformation of Chinese painting. One of the most interesting Chinese artists of the Qing era is Giuseppe Castiglione (1688 - 1766), an Italian Jesuit monk, missionary and court artist and architect in China. It was this man who became the first artist to combine Chinese and European traditions in his drawing.

    Slide 8

    The 19th and 20th centuries became a great test of strength for China. China has entered an era of change on a scale never before seen. During the 19th century, China lost 2 opium wars to European colonialists and suffered significant devastation from the Europeans. In 1894 - 1895, China lost the war to Japan and was divided into zones of influence between the European colonial empires (including Russia), the USA and Japan.

    Slide 9

    However, the most striking personality in Chinese painting of the 20th century was undoubtedly Qi Baishi (1864 - 1957), who combined two previously incompatible biographical features for a Chinese artist; he was an adherent of “painting of intellectuals” and at the same time came from a poor peasant family. Qi Baishi also received wide recognition in the West, and in 1955 he was awarded the International Peace Prize.

    Symbolism in Chinese painting Chinese painting is also characterized by an extremely elegant language of images. Often depicting something, a Chinese artist puts a certain subtext into the drawing. Some images are particularly common, for example, four noble plants: orchid, bamboo, chrysanthemum, meihua plum. In addition, each of these plants correlates with a certain character quality. The orchid is delicate and sophisticated, associated with the tenderness of early spring. Bamboo is a symbol of unyielding character, a true man of high moral qualities (Xun Tzu). Chrysanthemum is beautiful, chaste and modest, the embodiment of the triumph of autumn. The blooming wild plum meihua is associated with purity of thoughts and resistance to the adversities of fate. In plant subjects, other symbolism is also found: for example, when painting a lotus flower, the artist talks about a person who has retained purity of thoughts and wisdom, living in a stream of everyday problems.


    From ancient times until the invasion of colonialists in mid-19th century V. In the Far East, one of the brightest and most distinctive civilizations, Chinese, developed consistently, continuously and almost exclusively on its own basis. The development of this civilization, closed from external influences and impacts, is due to the enormous size of the territory and long-term isolation from other ancient societies. The ancient Chinese civilization developed in such isolation as if it were on another planet. Only in the 2nd century. BC. the first contact with another high culture occurred through Zhang Qian's travels to Central Asia. And another 300 years had to pass before the Chinese became seriously interested in the cultural phenomenon of Buddhism that came from abroad.


    The stability of ancient Chinese civilization was also given by an ethnically homogeneous population that called itself the Han people. The vitality and development potential of Han society was supported by a strong centralized state, the tendency towards the creation and strengthening of which was leading throughout ancient Chinese civilization. A real eastern despotism was created with exceptionally high centralization of power in the hands of the ruler, with a clear administrative-territorial division and a huge staff of learned officials. This model of statehood, cemented by the ideology of Confucianism, existed in China until the fall of the Manchu dynasty at the beginning of the 20th century. The example of the establishment in China since ancient times of the advantages of state property and its dominant role in the development of civilization is also unique. The private owner was under strict control of the authorities to maintain conservative stability in society.


    Ancient China is a unique example of class hierarchy. In Chinese society, there were farmers, artisans, merchants, officials, priests, warriors and slaves. They constituted, as a rule, closed hereditary corporations in which each person knew his place. Vertical corporate connections prevailed over horizontal ones. The basis of Chinese statehood is a large family, consisting of several generations of relatives. Society from top to bottom was bound by mutual responsibility. The experience of total control, suspicion and denunciation is also one of the achievements of the civilization of Ancient China.


    Ancient Chinese civilization in its breakthrough in the development of man, society and state, in its achievements and influence on the world comparable to antiquity. China's closest neighbors, the countries of East Asia (Korea, Vietnam, Japan) used Chinese hieroglyphic writing, adapting it to the needs of their languages, the ancient Chinese language became the language of diplomats, the government structure and legal system were built on Chinese models, Confucianism had a significant influence on the formation of the official ideology or Buddhism in a sinicized form.


    The most ancient tribes, who settled the fertile valleys of the large rivers of China in the Neolithic era (8th millennium BC), created settlements from small adobe huts sunk into the ground. They cultivated fields, raised domestic animals, and knew many crafts. Currently open in China a large number of Neolithic sites. The ceramics of that time discovered at these sites belong to several cultures, the oldest of which is the Yangshao culture, which received its name from the site of the first excavations carried out in the 20s. XX century in Henan province. Yangshao vessels were made from pale yellow or reddish-brown fired clay, first by hand, then using a potter's wheel.


    Those made on a potter's wheel were distinguished by their extraordinary regularity of shape. The ceramics were fired at a temperature of about one and a half thousand degrees Celsius, and then polished with a boar's tooth, making it smooth and shiny. The upper part of the vessels was covered with complex geometric patterns triangles, spirals, rhombuses and circles, as well as images of birds and animals. Fish stylized as geometric painting were especially popular. The ornament had a magical meaning and, apparently, was associated with the ancient Chinese ideas about the forces of nature. Thus, zigzag lines and sickle-shaped signs were probably conventional images of lightning and the moon, which later turned into Chinese characters.


    The next period in the history of China was called Shang-Yin (XVIXI centuries BC) after the name of the tribe that settled the Yellow River valley in the 2nd millennium BC. It was then that the first Chinese state was formed, headed by the ruler Wang, who was also the high priest. At that time, significant changes took place in all spheres of life of the inhabitants of China: silk spinning, bronze casting, hieroglyphic writing were invented, and the foundations of urban planning were born. The capital of the state, the great city of Shan, located near the modern city of Anyang, unlike the most ancient settlements, had a distinct plan.


    When the state was formed in China, the idea of ​​Heaven as the powerful supreme deity of the Universe arose. The ancient Chinese believed that their country was located in the center of the Earth, while the latter was square and flat. The sky over China is shaped like a circle. That's why they called their country Zhongguo (Middle Kingdom) or Tianxia (Celestial Empire). IN different times years, abundant sacrifices were made to Heaven and Earth. For this purpose, special altars were erected outside the city: round for Heaven, square for Earth.


    Many artistic crafts have survived to this day, which were intended for ritual ceremonies in honor of the spirits of ancestors and deities who control the forces of nature. Ritual bronze vessels used for sacrifices are distinguished by their craftsmanship. These heavy monolithic products combined all the prevailing ideas about the world at that time. The outer surfaces of the vessels are covered with relief. The main place in it was given to images of birds and dragons, embodying the elements of sky and water, cicadas, foreshadowing a good harvest, bulls and rams, promising people satiety and prosperity. ritual bronze vessels




    A tall, slender cup (“gu”), widening at the top and bottom, was intended for sacrificial wine. Typically, a thin spiral “thunder pattern” (“lei wen”) was depicted on the surface of these vessels, against which the main images were made. The voluminous animal faces seem to grow from bronze. The vessels themselves often had the shape of animals and birds (Ritual bronze vessel), because they were supposed to protect people and protect crops from evil forces. The surface of such vessels was completely filled with protrusions and engravings. The bizarre and fantastic shape of ancient Chinese bronze vessels with dragons was arranged by four vertical convex ribs located on the sides. These ribs oriented the vessels to the cardinal points, emphasizing their ritual character. Ritual bronze vessel



    The underground burials of the nobility in the Shang-Yin era consisted of two deep underground chambers of a cruciform or rectangular shape located one above the other. Their area sometimes reached four hundred square meters, the walls and ceiling were painted with red, black and white paints or inlaid with pieces of stone, metal, etc. The entrances to the burials were guarded by stone figures of fantastic beasts. So that the souls of the ancestors did not need anything, various handicrafts, weapons, bronze vessels, carved stones, jewelry, as well as magical objects (a bronze figure on a pedestal) were placed in the graves. All the objects that were placed in the burials, as well as the patterns that decorated the statues and bronze utensils, had a magical meaning and were connected by a single symbolism: a bronze figure on a pedestal


    In the 11th century BC. The state of Shang-Yin was conquered by the Zhou tribe. The winners, who founded the Zhou Dynasty (13th centuries BC), quickly adopted many of the technical and cultural achievements of the vanquished. The Zhou state existed for many centuries, but its prosperity was short-lived. Many new states appeared on the political arena, and China already by the 8th century. BC. entered into a period of internecine wars. Period from V to III centuries. BC. was called Zhanguo (“warring kingdoms”).


    The new kingdoms that emerged brought vast areas into the orbit of Chinese civilization. Trade between remote regions of China began to actively develop, which was facilitated by the construction of canals. Iron deposits were discovered, which made it possible to switch to iron tools and improve farming techniques. Round coins of the same shape came into circulation, replacing money made in the shape of a spade (tapered shovel), sword or shell. The range of crafts that came into use expanded significantly. Science developed in cities. Thus, in the capital of the kingdom of Qi, the first higher education institution in China was created. educational institution Jixia Academy. A huge role in all subsequent artistic life China played arose in the middle of the 1st millennium BC. two teachings: Confucianism and Taoism.


    Confucianism, which sought to maintain order and balance in the state, turned to the traditions of the past. The founder of the teaching, Confucius (circa BC), considered the eternal order of relations established by Heaven in family and society, between the sovereign and his subjects, between father and son. Believing himself to be the custodian and interpreter of the wisdom of the ancients, who served as role models, he developed a whole system of rules and norms of human behavior - Ritual. According to the Ritual, it is necessary to honor ancestors, respect elders, and strive for internal improvement. He also created rules for all spiritual manifestations of life, and established strict laws in music, literature and painting. Unlike Confucianism, Taoism focused on the fundamental laws of the universe. The main place in this teaching was occupied by the theory of the Tao Way of the Universe, or the eternal variability of the world, subordinate to the natural necessity of nature itself, the balance of which is possible thanks to the interaction of the feminine and masculine yin and yang. The founder of the teachings, Laozi, believed that human behavior should be guided by the natural laws of the Universe, which cannot be violated, otherwise harmony in the world will be disrupted, chaos and death will ensue. The contemplative, poetic approach to the world inherent in the teachings of Laozi manifested itself in all areas of the artistic life of ancient China.


    During the Zhou and Zhanguo periods, many decorative items appeared. applied arts, serving ritual purposes: bronze mirrors, bells, various objects made from the sacred stone jade. Translucent, always cold jade symbolized purity and was always considered a guardian against poison and damage (Jade figurine). bellsJade figurine


    Painted lacquerware, tables, trays, boxes, discovered in the burials, musical instruments, richly decorated with ornaments, also served ritual purposes. The production of varnish, like silk weaving, was then known only in China. The natural sap of the lacquer tree, painted in different colors, was repeatedly applied to the surface of the product, which gave it shine, strength and protected it from moisture. In the burials of Hunan Province in Central China, archaeologists discovered many objects of lacquerware (Wooden figurine of a guardian).Wooden figurine of a guardian


    In the 3rd century. BC. after long wars and civil strife, the small kingdoms united into a single, powerful empire, headed by the Qin dynasty (BC) and then the Han (206 BC-220 AD). The ruler and unlimited ruler of the Qin Empire, Qin Shi-Huangdi (BC) was the Chinese emperor for a short time, but managed to strengthen the central power. He destroyed the borders of independent kingdoms and divided the country into thirty-six provinces, to each of which he appointed a capital official. Under Shi Huangdi, new well-maintained roads were laid and canals were dug to connect provincial centers with the capital Xianyang (Shaanxi Province). A unified written language was created, which allowed residents of different regions to communicate with each other, despite the difference in local dialects.




    Its length was seven hundred and fifty kilometers. The thickness of the wall ranged from five to eight meters, the height of the wall reached ten meters. The upper edge was crowned with teeth. Along the entire length of the wall there were numerous signal towers, on which lights were lit in case of the slightest danger. A road was built from the Great Wall of China to the capital itself.


    The tomb of Emperor Qin Shi Huangdi was also built on an equally large scale. It was erected (fifty kilometers from Xianyang) within ten years after the emperor’s accession to the throne. More than seven hundred thousand people took part in the construction. The tomb was surrounded by two rows of high walls, forming a square in plan (symbol of the Earth). In the center there was a high cone-shaped burial mound. Round in plan, it symbolized Heaven. The walls of the underground tomb are lined with polished marble slabs and jade, the floor is covered with huge polished stones with a map of nine regions painted on them. Chinese Empire. On the floor there were sculptures of five sacred mountains, and the ceiling looked like a firmament with shining luminaries. After the sarcophagus with the body of Emperor Qin Shi Huang was transferred to the underground palace, a huge number of precious objects that accompanied him during his life were placed around it: vessels, jewelry, musical instruments.


    But underground kingdom was not limited to the burial itself. In 1974, at a distance of one and a half kilometers from it, archaeologists discovered eleven deep underground tunnels lined with ceramic tiles. Located parallel to each other, the tunnels served as a shelter for a giant clay army, guarding the peace of their master. Clay army


    The army, divided into several ranks, is lined up in battle formation. There are also horses and chariots, also sculpted from clay. All figures are life-size and painted; each of the warriors has individual features (Terracotta figure of an archer from the tomb of Qin Shi Huang).Terracotta figure of an archer from the tomb of Qin Shi Huang


    Traces of change in the country were noticeable everywhere, but it should be noted that the power of Qin Shi Huang was based on total control, denunciation and terror. Order and prosperity were achieved through too drastic measures, causing despair among the Qin people. Traditions, morality and virtues were neglected, which forced the bulk of the population to experience spiritual discomfort. In 213 BC. The emperor ordered the expulsion of Songs and Traditions and the burning of all private bamboo books, except for fortune-telling texts, books on medicine, pharmacology, agriculture and mathematics. The monuments located in the archives survived, but most of the ancient sources on the history and literature of China perished in the fire of this madness. A decree was issued banning private teaching, criticism of the government, and the once flourishing philosophies. After the death of Qin Shi Huang in 210 BC. Against the backdrop of general political instability and discontent, uprisings began, which led to the death of the empire.


    In 207 BC. Power was seized by the rebel leader Liu Bang, the future founder of the Han dynasty, which ruled for four centuries. In the II century. BC. The Han Empire recognized Confucianism and in its person acquired an official ideology with a distinctly religious overtone. Violation of Confucian precepts was punishable by death as the most serious crime. Based on Confucianism, a comprehensive system of lifestyle and management organization was developed. The emperor in his reign had to rely on the principles of philanthropy and justice, and learned officials had to help him pursue the right policy.


    Relations in society were regulated on the basis of Ritual, which determined the responsibilities and rights of each group of the population. All people were to build family relationships based on the principles of filial piety and brotherly love. This meant that each person had to unquestioningly carry out the will of his father, obey his older brothers, and take care of his parents in old age. Thus, Chinese society became class-based not only in the state, but also in the moral sense of this concept. The obedience of the younger to the elder, the lower to the higher, and all together to the emperor is the basis for the development of Chinese civilization with its universal strict regulation of life down to the smallest detail.


    The Han era in Chinese history was marked by a new flowering of culture and art, and the development of science. Emerges historical science. Its founder, Sima Qian, created a five-volume treatise in which he outlined in detail the history of China since ancient times. Chinese scholars put a lot of effort into copying ancient writings from worn-out bamboo slips that served as books onto silk scrolls. The most important discovery was the invention in the 1st century. AD paper Caravan routes connected China with other countries. For example, along the Great Silk Road, the Chinese brought silk and the finest hand embroidery to the west, which were famous throughout the world. Written sources preserve information about the lively trade of the Han Empire with India and distant Rome, in which China has long been called the Land of Silk.


    The main centers of the Han Empire, Luoyang and Chang'an, were built according to the rules set out in ancient treatises according to a plan with a clear division into quarters. The palaces of the rulers were located on the main thoroughfare of the city and consisted of residential and state rooms, gardens and parks. Noble people were buried in spacious tombs, the walls of which were lined with ceramic or stone slabs, and the ceilings were supported by stone columns, which usually ended with a pair of dragons. Outside, the Alley of Spirits of the Guardians of the Grave, framed by statues of animals, led to the funeral hill.


    Objects were found in the burials that give an idea of Everyday life Han era ceramic painted models of houses, painted clay jugs, bronze mirrors, painted figurines of dancers, musicians, domestic animals. bronze mirrors of musicians

    In funeral arrangements main role reliefs played. The richest in content are the reliefs in the burials of the provinces of Shandong and Sichuan. The reliefs depict scenes of the harvest, wild duck hunting, and racing light chariots harnessed to thin-legged hot horses (“Procession with Chariot and Riders”). All images are very realistic. Procession with chariot and horsemen




    The presentation was created based on materials from the electronic editions of the Schoolchild's Encyclopedia - “Riddles and secrets of architecture”, “Wonders of the world. Ancient World”, and the Collections of World Artistic Culture of the Russian General Education Portal (www. school. edu. ru). And also: N.A. Dmitrieva, N.A. Vinogradova “Art ancient world", M.; "Children's Literature", 1986 Encyclopedia for Children. (Vol. 7) Art. Part 1, "The World of Avanta+ Encyclopedias", Astrel, 2007; “Large Illustrated Encyclopedia of Art History”, Moscow, “Swallowtail”, 2008 Bronze lamp in the shape of a tapir, 4th century. BC.

    Chinese paintingChinese painting -
    an important part
    traditional
    Chinese culture and
    priceless treasure
    of the Chinese nation, she
    has a long history and
    glorious traditions in
    areas of the world
    arts
    Chinese
    painting is also called
    traditional chinese
    painting. Traditional
    Chinese art
    dates back to the Neolithic period,
    about eight thousand years
    back. Found on
    excavated colored ceramics
    with drawn
    animals, fish,
    deer and frogs
    shows that during
    Neolithic Chinese already
    started using brushes
    for drawing.

    During the Qin Dynasty and
    Han is developing
    fresco painting. Her
    used for burials, and
    also in temples and palaces. WITH
    development of Buddhism in the period from 3
    until the 6th century the temple developed
    painting, for example,
    Buddha images in the mountains
    caves.
    Ancient Chinese
    painting was very different from
    European painting. In Europe
    widely used
    possibilities of color, shadows, and
    In China, painters created
    amazing pictures of the game
    lines. The main thing that distinguishes
    Chinese painting from
    European is the desire
    convey the “spirit of the picture”, or how
    the Chinese say “with the help
    forms to express mood.”

    Ancient Chinese
    painting, as in other things
    modern, knew two
    main style: "gong bi"
    (diligent brush) and “se and”
    (expression of an idea).
    Chinese principles
    paintings are
    admiring nature as
    a perfect creation.

    The genres of Chinese painting are quite diverse: - animalistic genres, - everyday genres, - ceremonial portrait, - miniature on fans and others

    household items,
    - Chinese landscape painting.
    Didn't exist in China
    still life in the usual
    for us it means
    stationary objects with
    Chinese point of view
    dead without dynamics
    movements of life and
    time.

    Chinese painting gravitates towards certain stable images: one of the most favorite objects of aesthetic embodiment in painting is

    Chinese art
    gravitates towards certain
    sustainable images:
    one of the most
    favorite objects
    aesthetic
    embodiments in painting
    is bamboo
    In Chinese
    in pictures bamboo is
    not just a plant, but
    human symbol
    character.

    Chinese painting and calligraphy

    In China use
    one tool and
    for painting, and for
    calligraphy - brushes
    - connected these two species
    art.
    Calligraphy (from the Greek words
    κάλλος kallos "beauty" + γραφή
    graphẽ "to write") - view
    visual arts,
    aesthetic design
    handwritten font.

    The total number of Chinese characters reaches 80,000. But in reality, no more than 10 thousand characters are used in all types of texts. Chinese

    hieroglyphs are difficult for
    spellings: each of them
    consists of several
    devil (from 1 to 52).
    Calligraphy is like
    painting and process
    creating a hieroglyph
    brush and ink akin to
    creation process
    paintings.