Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Commercial status in Chinese painting refers to

Commercial status in Chinese painting refers to

Traditional Chinese painting refers to composition as "management position", "composition" and "layout". , emphasizing the author's subjective handling of the picture, reflecting the tolerance that everything is under control.

In the history of China painting, "management position" has always been one of the most important theories. The importance of composition has long been recognized by painters. Gu Kaizhi in the Eastern Jin Dynasty put forward in "On Painting" that "observing the landscape and seeking the landscape, painting is also changing". The "management post" here is about the composition and composition of painting. The "management position" first appeared. Zhang Yanyuan gave a detailed account of Sheikh's six laws in the later Tang Dynasty. The original meaning of "management" is architecture, structure and creation. Sheikh borrowed "management" to describe the painter's thinking and arrangement of the whole picture layout before painting began. "Position" refers to the specific position of the painter in the picture, and refers to the picture space. In Chinese painting, this picture space is different from the real space.