Introduction::
Chinese painting has its origins in the pictographs inscribed on bronze
during the Xia, Shang and Zhou dynasties. Paintings on silk, possessing
linear effecyts, had appeared during the period of the Warring States
(475-221BC) and by the late Western Han era (206BC-AD24), paintings in
rich colours were being done, such as the murals discovered in Han tombs.
In the history of Chinese painting, figure painting was the first genre
to appear.
The earliest examples, during the Warring States period, were on silk.
(Paper began to be manufactured only in the first century AD.) By the
prime Tang (AD740-70), figure painting was already well advanced. Mountains,
rivers, flowers and birds served only as the background or embellishment
of a painting; they developed into independent genres at a much later
date. In time, however, landscape painting became the most important genre
and numerous schools,theories and techniques relating to it evolved. The
earliest extant Chinese landscape is Spring Excursion by Zhan Ziqian of
the Sui(AD 581-618),an artist who paid special attention to brushwork
and used dots and lines as his principal method of expression. Today,
many artists believe that a mastery of landscape painting makes it easier
to learn figure and flower-and bird painting because techniques learnt
for the former can be used in the latter.