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                  Chinese 
                    Arts    
          
   
The Visual Arts    
    Chinese art, like Chinese literature, goes back many centuries. Early themes     
  were developed from religious and supernatural beliefs or from the natural environment     
  and landscape. One of the oldest and most basic forms of Chinese art is calligraphy,     
  the painting of the Chinese characters with a brush. Calligraphy has developed     
  as a pure art form with its own standards of excellence. Building on the tradition     
  of calligraphy, Chinese painting developed a distinctive style that differs     
  greatly from Western painting. It is more efficient in terms of brushstrokes     
  and appears more abstract. Landscapes have always been a popular theme, and     
  sometimes these appear bizarre to the Western eye. To the Chinese painter, they     
  may represent a figurative view painted with a few swift strokes of the artist's     
  brush.       
    With their stress on simplicity and economy, Chinese calligraphy, painting,      
  and poetry are closely related. In all of them, the artist seeks to express      
  both inner harmony and harmony with the natural surroundings. Chinese poets      
  and painters often have sought inspiration by withdrawing to isolated, mountainous      
  areas, and these landscapes have become conventional themes of Chinese art.      
  Similarly, Chinese architecture has traditionally aimed to convey harmony with      
  society and nature.        
    The magnificent life-size terra-cotta statues of men and horses, discovered       
  in the early 1970s in the tomb of an emperor who died in 210 B.C., provide some       
  indication of the long history of Chinese sculpture. After the introduction       
  of Buddhism into China, Buddhist subjects became dominant themes of the sculptor's       
  art. Perhaps best known (and most copied) in the West, however, are the works       
  of Chinese decorative artists, such as pottery, bronzes, lacquer ware, and exquisitely       
  detailed jade and ivory carvings.         
         
Chinese Sculpture       
    Reports of the splendor of Asian art were brought to Europe by Marco Polo.        
  By the 18th century Europeans not only possessed original ceramics, enamels,        
  and furniture from the East but were adapting Asian designs and skills in their        
  own products. Chinese Chippendale furniture and chinaware are examples. The        
  art of Japan was brought into prominence in the mid-19th century in Paris by        
  the Goncourt brothers, and it was Auguste Rodin who first gave public recognition        
  to the sculpture of India. In the latter part of the 19th century, when artists        
  were seeking inspiration for a newer, fresher art, these sources, together with        
  those of Africa and Muslim countries, provided them with rich material.          
    The Chinese were master craftsmen and produced fine sculpture, especially in        
  bronze. Although bronze casting existed a thousand years earlier, it was in        
  the Chou period (1122-221 B.C.) that China developed the art to its peak.  
         
    This is evident in the great ceremonial vessels used by the nobility for ancestor        
  worship. From tombs of the Han Empire (202 B.C.- A.D.220) have come a rich variety        
  of clay figures of people, animals, and household utensils designed to make        
  life comfortable in the next world. Other objects are wrought in bronze, inlaid        
  with silver and gold, and elaborately ornamented with abstract and fanciful        
  designs. Carvings in jade and bas-reliefs on tomb walls also reached a high        
  degree of excellence.          
    One of the most magnificent archaeological finds of the century was the tomb        
  of Shi Huangdi at Xi'an, China. In March 1974 an underground chamber was found        
  containing an army of more than 6,000 life-size terra-cotta soldiers of the        
  late 3rd century B.C. Other nearby chambers contained more than 1,400 ceramic        
  figures of cavalrymen and chariots, all arranged in battle formation.          
    The prosperous T'ang Dynasty (618-907) developed Buddhist art to its highest        
  level. Stone was a favorite medium for religious sculpture, and iron replaced        
  bronze in the casting of figures. The glazed terra-cotta figures of this period        
  are especially fine.          
    With the decline of Buddhism in the Sung period (960-1279), Chinese sculpture        
  lost its vigor. Nevertheless, interesting works continued to be produced, such        
  as the Bodhisattvas. In Japan Buddhism and its art followed the Chinese pattern.  
        
        
    This article was contributed by Jack Bookbinder, former Director of Art Education,        
  Philadelphia Public Schools and by Christopher Lyon, Editor, Department of Public        
  Information, The Museum of Modern Art, New York.         
          
          
Buddhist Art       
    Visual art has been a useful instrument in bringing Buddhism to many people.        
  Throughout Asia, drawings, paintings, and sculptures of the Buddha have been        
  used for teaching and veneration.          
    Buddhist art is not just decoration. Images of the Buddha show people what it        
  looks like to have achieved Nirvana, total bliss. He is shown as calm and loving,        
  usually with a soft smile and radiant energy. Some scenes show the Buddha at        
  key moments of his life, for example, sitting under the Bo tree. Others illustrate        
  his teachings. There is a story that tells of the Buddha offering his body as        
  food for a hungry mother tiger and her cubs because he felt that all life was        
  sacred. This scene is a popular visual theme in the cave temples of China and        
  Japan.          
    Other Buddhist paintings illustrate the sacred writings, as stained glass windows        
  were created to illustrate the Bible in many Christian churches. Since Buddhists        
  believe that anyone can be on the path toward Enlightenment, these visual images        
  of the Buddha along his own path are a helpful addition to the writings that        
  people study. They make the texts more personal and inviting.          
    Buddhist imagery has played a significant role in the development of sacred        
  art and temple architecture throughout Asia. It is through the artistic images        
  and temple remains that scholars have been able to trace the growth and spread        
  of Buddhism. Artistic styles, for example, were carried from one culture to        
  another as Buddhism spread throughout Asia. Many of the Buddhist images of China        
  and Japan had their origin in India many centuries before.          
    Buddhist sacred writings influenced the literature of the countries that accepted        
  Buddhism as a religion. The oldest texts of Buddhism are the Pali Canon, the        
  writings that are held most authentic by the older and more conservative school,        
  the Theravada. These texts concentrate on the Theravada goal of the individual        
  becoming a Buddha. The Mahayana school has for many centuries built on this        
  base, but their writings are more keyed to their own philosophy of serving others.  
        
        
    Like religion itself and the visual imagery, Buddhist sacred literature began        
  in India and was spread in translation through Asia. Each country made the literature        
  its own and was, in turn, influenced in other areas of cultural development        
  by the teachings of the Buddha.  
  
        
                 
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