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Jing Hao & Guan Tong
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Jing Hao and
Guan Tong are the two representative artists of the northern
school of landscape painting, the two were also known as Jing-Guan.
Apart from leading the same school of art they both found the
turmoil in the north of China too much to bear and fled to the
remote mountain areas to live in relative solitude. The leaders of the southern school were two great
landscapists that worked at the same time named, Dong Yuan
and Ju Ran also known as Dong-Ju.
What are the exact criteria for
this distinction between north and south has often been the
topic of much debate. This
distinction became especially bewildering after the great
landscapist and theoretician of the Ming dynasty (1368-1644),
Dong Qichang classified different artists into these
respective schools in a somewhat bizarre and arbitrary manner.
However, in spite of the different
opinions it seems like there are certain parameters according to
which this classification can be made, the most apparent one
being the fact that the north and the south of China are
geographically different, the north displaying dry and rocky
landscapes with jagged, peaky and imposing peaks, while the
south is host to a more mild and lush terrain with rounded hills
and abundance of water. This stark difference in terrain led
different artists to develop different techniques to better
express what they saw, or better yet felt, and indeed, the
blurriness between the northern and southern schools of
Landscape Painting is due to a difference in the artist’s
temperament not necessarily a difference in the artists
geographical location.
The northern school frequently
used a technique known as Fu Pi Cun,
or “Ax Chopped strokes”, this technique is aggressive and
forceful, leaving the surface of the paper or silk with
grotesque marks that adequately reflect the powerful and
vigorous scenes of the north. The southern school preferred the
so-called Pi Ma Cun, or “Hemp Fiber strokes” which were
more suitable to depict the luxuriant vegetation, moist and
gentle texture of the south.
Another essential difference between north and south is that the
monumental northern landscapes gave the viewer a grand
perspective that could be captured at once, this is sometimes
referred to as “full-view” landscape. The northern tendency to
glorify the power and vastness of nature was opposed to the more
lyrical southern landscapes which usually brought the view
closer to the audience to create a more intimate feeling.
Jing Hao was the first great
figure to adequately depict the characteristic landscape of the
north using new and innovative techniques. He stressed the
importance of ink application and in a way symbolizes the
amazing changes that took place during the short and chaotic
period of the Five Dynasties in terms of painting technique. Not
only a great painter Jing Hao is also renowned for his great
contributions in the field of theory. His writings are fully
presented in a book named Brushwork which was written in the form of
a dialogue.
In this landmark in Chinese art theory Jing Hao introduces his
famous 'Six Key Points' which undoubtedly refer to pre-Tang art
theorist Xie He's famous 'Six Principles'. As opposed to Xie He’s essentials which layed
down the basics for painting, in his six points, Jing Hao stresses
the idea of “thought” and the importance of ink. These additions
clearly demonstrate how conceptualization through thought and not
necessarily through imagery or reality is essential. The stress
on ink reflects the great changes that took place in technique
since Xie He’s time when ink wash methods where almost
non-existent. During Xie he's time there was a strong reliance
on lines, strokes and coloring of contoured areas. Another
important theoretical point Jing Hao introduced was the relation
between “likeness” and “reality”, according to him likeness can
be a technical method to accurately depict the world we live in
but reality is something that transcends visual likeness, it is a totality of elements – emotional, visual and spiritual
which compose the intricate and indefinable thing called reality.
Although not a theoretician, Guan
Tong took Jing Hao’s art even further when he beautifully
reflected the changes that take place throughout the year as the
seasons transform nature. He depicted the
characterizing features of the different seasons and the effects
of nature's changes on the human spirit. This cyclical feature is
central in the philosophy and practice of Chinese medicine and
Chinese thought in general. Like Jing Hao he represents the
Northern School and uses techniques representative of this
school, namely, Ax Chopped Strokes.
Jing Hao and Guan Tong created a
new monumental style that adequately manifested the force and
splendor of the northern tradition. Their new techniques
gave the texture of mountains and rocks a rigid feeling and
solidity that were unprecedented before their time. The
technical solutions they developed were an essential gate to the
golden age of Song landscape painting which relayed on their
influence to advance Chinese landscape painting to a new level
of realism.
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