Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Chinese painting

Chinese painting

Chinese painting is introduced as follows:

The first step is to gently determine the composition of the landscape with a pencil, and the central part is the location of the waterfall.

The second step is to describe the waterfall. Draw the light and shade of the waterfall with a pencil first, and then rub the realism of the waterfall with a pen.

The third step is to draw the distant mountains with rubbings. The imaginary part of the pen is very easy to use.

Step four, draw the mountain next to the waterfall, pay attention to the cloud cover, and don't draw the mountain too heavy.

Step five, draw the light and shade and structure of the mountain in front of the left with a pencil.

The sixth step is to use the rubbing pen to rub the mountain rubbings of the previous step and portray the depth of reality in place.

Step 7, draw the mountain in front of the right in the same way.

Finally, draw a river pattern in front with a rubbing pen.

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Landscape painting, referred to as "landscape" for short, is a kind of Chinese painting, which mainly depicts the natural scenery of mountains and rivers. Landscape painting occupies an important position in the history of China painting, which can be divided into green landscape, ink landscape, light crimson landscape, small green landscape and boneless landscape. It is a very distinctive art in oriental painting. Representative painters are Zhan Ziqian, Wang Wei, Fan Kuan and Zhang Hong.

Landscape painting is one of the traditional classifications of Chinese painting. The early scenery is mainly the background of figure painting. In Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, it gradually became independent from figure painting, and in Sui and Tang Dynasties, it formed a separate classification of Chinese painting. Wu Daozi, Li Sixun, Wang Wei and others are all good at painting landscape paintings.