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Painting on Silk
Twenty-four years after the Human, Dragon and Phoenix Painting was
discovered, another silk
painting was found, also in a tomb of the Chu Kingdom. It depicts a man
wearing a thick hat, holding a rein in one hand and a sword in the other, and
riding a dragon boat. It is called the Dragon Boat Riding Painting.
Dragon Boat Riding Painting
According to experts, the man is a likeness of the one buried in the tomb,
and the picture symbolizes his soul rising up to heaven. The concept of one's
soul going up to heaven after death was very popular in the Chu Kingdom. This
picture is similar in content and expressive form to the Human, Dragon and
Phoenix Painting. The only difference is that the figures in the Dragon Boat
Riding Painting are rendered more realistically and the proportion of the human
bodies is closer to that of real people. These examples show that there were
already varied painting styles in the Warring
States Period . Some tended to be realistic, others more decorative.
Paintings on silk developed to a high level during this period, an advance that
laid the foundation for meticulous Chinese painting.
Written theories on painting first appeared during the Warring States Period.
For example, the philosopher Han
Feizi commented that it is difficult to draw dogs and horses, but easy to
depict ghosts.
There is also a record of an artist painting a winnowing fan for a king with the
figures of snakes, dragons, horses, carts and so on. Qu
Yuan's famous poem Tian Wen (Asking Heaven), written during the period,
contains descriptions of wall paintings in the Chu temples
.
Before paper
was invented, paintings on silk continued to develop. By the Western
Han Dynasty (206 B.C.- A.D.23), they had become richer in content and color,
smoother and more forceful in brush strokes and the depiction of figures had
become more vivid.
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