Chinese painting, closely related to Chinese calligraphy and poetry, is 
one of the most important manifestations of Chinese cultural life and 
ideas.To get more 
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Pictorial art can be traced back to the age of cavemen. Color 
painting was mentioned in the Confucian classics. Even the use of 
oil-paint has been discovered on specimens of silk, lacquer or pottery 
of a very early date. But Chinese painting in the classical form and 
style was only made possible after the 3rd century B.C., when the 
finely-pointed writing-brush, which we Chinese prefer to call a "pen," 
was first invented and then gradually improved.
Chinese painting, like the painting of other cultural areas, began 
with figure-painting for the purpose of keeping a vivid pictorial record
of important events, such as hunts, battles, processions and the like. 
We know that mural paintings of historical scenes and figures already 
existed during the Han Dynasty (B.C. 206-A.D. 220), and that there were 
painters in attendance upon the emperor at the Han court. As an instance
of this, we may recall the story, well-known to every Chinese, of the 
court painter, Mao Yen-shou, who maliciously disfigured the most 
beautiful lady Wang Chao-chun in her portrait, which he was commissioned
to paint in order to aid the Emperor Yuan (B.C. 48-32) to select, from 
among his court ladies, a bride for a powerful Hunnish chieftain. The 
tragic fate of this charming and talented lady occasioned by this 
unscrupulous act became subsequently a source of inspiration for poets, 
playwrights and painters alike.
In spite of the many descriptive records of Han paintings, there is 
none of them extant. All we can see today are the rubbings taken from 
stone carvings in sacred buildings or sarcophagi. But there is a famous 
piece of painting by Ku K'ai-chih on a silk scroll, dating from the next
period, Tsin Dynasty (A.D. 265-420), which is still well preserved. It 
is named "Admonitions of the Imperial Preceptress", after its 
subject-matter. Although some art critics hold the view that this is a 
copy of Ku's original, executed by a talented painter in the T'ang 
Dynasty (A.D. 618-907), it remains immaterial to those whose main 
interest lies in a study of the composition, style and technique of a 
great painter of human figures in the Tsin period.
It was during the Tang Dynasty that classical Chinese painting came 
of age. The preceding age, Sui Dynasty (A.D. 589-618), was too brief for
the realization of any great artistic achievements. I once examined an 
unquestionably genuine Sui scroll entitled "Travelers in Spring" by Chan
Tzu-ch'ien, a renowned painter of that period, and I could not help 
noticing immediately that the landscape part of this scroll was still in
an immature stage. However, a brilliant period of cultural renaissance,
especially in poetry and painting, was inaugurated as soon as the T'ang
Dynasty took up its rule over China. The painting of human beings and 
animals alike developed in parallel lines with art of landscapes. The 
number of great masters was almost evenly in different fields, and some 
of them were skilled in every field. Among the figure painters, Yen 
Li-pen whose famous scroll "Foreign Envoy Arriving with Tribute" is now 
preserved in Taiwan and reproduced in this work, was a versatile pioneer
in this field. Two distinguished artists, Chou Fang and Chang Hsuan, 
were generally recognized as masters in painting court beauties, while 
Wu Tao-tzu painted Buddhist and Taoist figures with simple but firm 
lines that convey a deep sense of serenity. Han Kan was -known as 
China's supreme painter of horses was in great vogue. Among landscape 
painters, the two generals Li Ssu-hsun and Li Chao-tao, father and son, 
ranked foremost, because they prepared the way for the florescence of 
Chinese landscape painting during and after the 8th century. They 
painted in a wide range of brilliant colors, especially blue and green, 
with exquisite taste. Another master of the same period, who founded a 
different school of landscape-painting in monochrome, was Wang Wei who 
was also a great poet. He painted human figures as well as landscapes, 
but it is in the latter branch that his influence and contribution 
became permanent.
					
 
					
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