Excerpted from Wilson Huang's Website. (Cool landscapes! Check it out!)
To avoid is a crowded, ill-arranged composition (composition)
Far and near not clearly distinguished (composition)
Mountains without Chi, the pulse of life
Referring not only to the need for pictorial vitality created by composition with a quality of spirit, particularly since mountains were symbols of life. Of the Yang(of Heaven and the Spirit)
Water with no indication of its source
The element regarded as a source of life and associated with the Yin.
Scenes lacking any places made inaccessible by nature(natural and logical)
Where man has ventured, paths are a sign of his presence and should naturally lead somewhere.
Paths with no indication of beginning and end
Stones and rocks with one face
The rock has 3 faces, referring to the third dimension and technical skill in rendering it .
The tree has four main branches and is represented as having solidity, roundness, and unity
Trees with less than four main branches
Figures unnaturally distorted
Emphasize fitness based on naturalness, contributing to the harmony of the parts and the whole of a painting. Figures not only should be undistorted but should be shown in action, their position and mood in tune with the rest of the painting and thus with the order of nature.
Buildings and pavilions inappropriately placed
Houses, pavilions, bridges, waterwheels, or boats, never overshadow other elements in the picture but contribute to its main theme, usually some aspect of nature rather than of human activity.
Atmospheric effects of mist and clearness neglected
Color applied without method
Mountains and water are not only the main structural elements in a landscape painting, but serve as symbols of the Yin and Yang. They are structural ideas, hence the significance of the term ShanShui (mountain water) for landscape pictures.
"Shih Erh Chi", quoted from a XIII-century work by Jao Tzu-jan
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2 comments:
Hi, what do you think about this online Chinese painting lessons?
Very easy to do steb-by-step models?
Whoa, that's cool! Thanks for pointing it out! Yours?
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