Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional customs - Chinese painting can be divided into techniques.

Chinese painting can be divided into techniques.

Chinese painting can be divided into meticulous painting, sketch, line drawing, boneless painting and finger painting according to techniques.

Meticulous brushwork is a method of meticulous brushwork in Chinese painting, which is symmetrical with freehand brushwork. Freehand brushwork is an indulgence of Chinese painting, which requires concise pen and ink to write the shape and spirit of objects to express the author's artistic conception.

Warping is a technique of Chinese painting, which is used to express the texture of stone and bark.

Line drawing is the technical name of Chinese painting, which originated from ancient line drawing.

Boneless is the scientific name of Chinese painting, which directly depicts objects and images with colors. After the Five Dynasties, Huang Quan painted flowers in Shu with fine outline, and almost no handwriting could be seen after coloring, so it was called "boneless flower branch". In the Northern Song Dynasty, Xu Chongsi studied the yellow world as a primary school student, and the flowers he made were only painted in color, which was called "boneless painting", and later people called it "boneless painting".

Another kind of landscape painting, called "Boneless Landscape" or "Boneless Map", is dyed with cyan, green and vermilion. According to legend, it was created by a monk in the Southern Dynasties, and Tang was good at this method.

Finger painting, referred to as finger painting, is a special painting method of Chinese painting. Fingers, nails and palms are dipped in ink or color to draw on paper silk.

What are China's classic Chinese paintings?

Fuchun Shan Jutu, Riverside Scene in Qingming Festival, Xiaochun Scene in Han Palace, Thousand Miles of Rivers and Mountains, Han Xizai's Night Banquet, Luoshenfu Scene, Hundred Horses Scene, Five Cattle Scene, Travel Scene, etc.