the art of china traditional chinese art consists of two main styles. gong bi 工筆 which means...

10
The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工工 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 工工 which means “freehand” or “sketching idea” is shown on the right. How are these styles similar? How are they different? Do they remind you of any art that we have studied this year? Why or why not?

Upload: arthur-mccoy

Post on 05-Jan-2016

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

The Art of China

• Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. • Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left.• Xie yi 寫意 which means “freehand” or “sketching idea” is shown on

the right.• How are these styles similar? How are they different? Do they remind

you of any art that we have studied this year? Why or why not?

Page 2: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

• Traditional Chinese art focuses on nature.

• The artists use few colors in their work.

• Can you see the styles mentioned in the last slide? Fine brushstroke or freehand?

Page 3: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Contemporary Chinese Art• “Contemporary”

means current or of today.

• The rest of the artists that we will study in this presentation are young Chinese artists that are alive and working today.

Page 4: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Wang Ke (born in 1982)

• What do you notice about these paintings?

• How are they similar or different to traditional Chinese art?

• Do you like these paintings? Why or why not?

Page 5: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Wang Xiaojin (born in 1968)

• What do you notice about these paintings?

• How are they more similar or different to traditional Chinese art?

• Do you like these paintings? Why or why not?

Page 6: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Li Jin (born in 1958)

• Are these paintings more modern or traditional?

• What role does nature play in these paintings?

Page 7: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Feng Dakang (born in 1972)

• What makes this artist’s work different from what we have seen so far?

• This artist is very interested in architecture (buildings and other large structures).

Page 8: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Wu Qing (birthdate unknown)• What makes this artist’s

work traditional?

• What are some clues that this is contemporary?

Page 9: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Huang Bai (born in 1982)

• What modern symbols do you see in these paintings?

• What parts of the pictures make them “traditional” Chinese?

Page 10: The Art of China Traditional Chinese art consists of two main styles. Gong bi 工筆 which means “fine brush stroke” is shown on the left. Xie yi 寫意 which

Which of these contemporary Chinese artists is your favorite? Why?