Main article: Tang Dynasty art
Buddhist architecture and
sculpture
Following a transition under the Sui Dynasty, Buddhist sculpture
of the Tang evolved towards a markedly lifelike expression. As a consequence of
the Dynasty's openness to foreign influences, and renewed exchanges with Indian
culture due to the numerous travels of Chinese Buddhist monks to India from the
4th to the 11th century, Tang dynasty Buddhist sculpture assumed a rather
classical form, inspired by the Indian art of the Gupta period.
However, foreign influences came to be negatively perceived towards the end of the Tang dynasty. In the year 845, the Tang emperor Wu-Tsung outlawed all "foreign" religions (including Christian Nestorianism, Zoroastrianism and Buddhism) in order to support the indigenous Taoism. He confiscated Buddhist possessions and forced the faith to go underground, therefore affecting the ulterior development of the religion and its arts in China.
Most wooden Tang sculptures have not survived, though representations of the Tang international style can still be seen in Nara, Japan. The longevity of stone sculpture has proved much greater. Some of the finest examples can be seen at Longmen, near Luoyang, Yungang near Datong, and Bingling Temple, in Gansu.
The lines are of uneven length, though five characters is the most common.
Each poem follows one of a series of patterns defined by the song title. The
term covers original folk songs, court imitations and versions by known
poets. From the 2nd century AD, the yue fu began to develop into shi—the form which
was to dominate Chinese poetry until the modern era. The writers of these poems
took the five-character line of the yue fu and used it to express more complex
ideas. The shi poem was generally an expression of the poet's own persona rather
than the adopted characters of the yue fu; many were romantic nature poems
heavily influenced by Taoism. The term gushi ("old poems") can refer either to the first, mostly anonymous
shi poems, or more generally to the poems written in the same form by later
poets. Gushi in this latter sense are defined essentially by what they are not;
that is, they are not jintishi (regulated verse). The writer of gushi was under
no formal constraints other than line length and rhyme (in every second
line). Jintishi, or regulated verse, developed from the 5th century onwards. By the
Tang dynasty, a series of set tonal patterns had been developed, which were
intended to ensure a balance between the four tones of classical Chinese in each
couplet: the level tone, and the three deflected tones (rising, falling and
entering). The Tang dynasty was the high point of the jintishi. Notable poets from this era include Bai Juyi, Du Mu, Han Yu, Jia Dao, Li
Qiao, Liu Zongyuan, Luo Binwang, Meng Haoran, Wang Wei, and Zhang Jiuling. Over a thousand poems are attributed to Li Po, but the authenticity of many
of these is uncertain. He is best known for his yue fu poems, which are intense
and often fantastic. He is often associated with Taoism: there is a strong
element of this in his works, both in the sentiments they express and in their
spontaneous tone. Nevertheless, his gufeng ("ancient airs") often adopt the
perspective of the Confucian moralist, and many of his occasional verses are
fairly conventional. Much like Mozart, many legends exist on how Li Po effortlessly composed his
poetry, even (or some say, especially) when drunk; his favorite form is the
jueju (five- or seven-character quatrain), of which he composed some 160 pieces.
Using striking, unconventional imagery, Li Po is able to create exquisite pieces
to utilize fully the elements of the language. His use of language is not as
erudite as Du Fu's but equally effective, impressing through an extravagance of
imagination and a direct connection of a free-spirited persona with the reader.
Li Po's interactions with nature, friendship, and his acute observations of life
inform his best poems. Some of the rest, like Changgan xing (translated by Ezra
Pound as A River Merchant's Wife: A Letter), records the hardships or emotions
of common people. Like the best Chinese poets, Li Po often evades
translation. Since the Song dynasty, critics have called Du Fu the "poet historian". The
most directly historical of his poems are those commenting on military tactics
or the successes and failures of the government, or the poems of advice which he
wrote to the emperor. One of the Du Fu's earliest surviving works, The Song of the Wagons (c. 750),
gives voice to the sufferings of a conscript soldier in the imperial army, even
before the beginning of the rebellion; this poem brings out the tension between
the need of acceptance and fulfillment of one's duties, and a clear-sighted
consciousness of the suffering which this can involve. Du Fu's work is notable above all for its range. He mastered all the forms of
Chinese poetry: Chou says that in every form he "either made outstanding
advances or contributed outstanding examples" (p. 56). Furthermore, his poems
use a wide range of registers, from the direct and colloquial to the allusive
and self-consciously literary. The tenor of his work changed as he developed his
style and adapted to his surroundings ("chameleonlike" according to Watson): his
earliest works are in a relatively derivative, courtly style, but he came into
his own in the years of the rebellion. Owen comments on the "grim simplicity" of
the Qinzhou poems, which mirrors the desert landscape (p. 425); the works from
his Chengdu period are "light, often finely observed" (p. 427); while the poems
from the late Kuizhou period have a "density and power of vision" (p. 433). Li Yu was a Chinese poet and the last ruler of the Southern Tang Kingdom. His
best-known poems were composed during the years after the Song formerly ended
his reign in 975 and brought him back as a captive to the Song capital, Bianjing
(now Kaifeng). Li's works from this period dwell on his regret for the lost
kingdom and the pleasures it had brought him. He was finally poisoned by the
Song emperor in 978. Li Yu developed the ci by broadening its scope from love to history and
philosophy, particularly in his later works. He also introduced the two-stanza
form, and made great use of contrasts between longer lines of nine characters
and shorter ones of three and five. Painting in the traditional style involved essentially the same techniques as
calligraphy and is done with a brush dipped in black or colored ink; oils were
not used. As with calligraphy, the most popular materials on which paintings are
made are paper and silk. The finished work is then mounted on scrolls, which can
be hung or rolled up. Traditional painting also is done in albums and on walls,
lacquerwork, and other media. Dong Yuan was an active painter in the Southern Tang Kingdom. He was known
for both figure and landscape paintings, and exemplified the elegant style which
would become the standard for brush painting in China over the next 900 years.
As with many artists in China, his profession was as an official where he
studied the existing styles of Li Sixun and Wang Wei. However, he added to the
number of techniques, including more sophisticated perspective, use of
pointillism and crosshatching to build up vivid effect.
Golden age of Chinese poetry
Yue fu are Chinese poems composed in a
folk song style. The term literally means "music bureau", a reference to the
government organization originally charged with collecting or writing the
lyrics.
Li Po and Du Fu
Li Po and Du Fu both lived during the Tang Dynasty.
They are regarded by many as the greatest of the Chinese poets.
Late Tang poetry
Li Shangyin was a Chinese poet of the late Tang
dynasty. He was a typical Late Tang poet: his works are sensuous, dense and
allusive. The latter quality makes adequate translation extremely difficult.
Many of his poems have political, romantic or philosophical implications, but it
is often unclear which of these should be read into each work.
Painting
Beginning in the Tang dynasty (618–907), the primary subject
matter of painting was the landscape, known as shanshui (mountain water)
painting. In these landscapes, usually monochromatic and sparse, the purpose was
not to reproduce exactly the appearance of nature but rather to grasp an emotion
or atmosphere so as to catch the "rhythm" of nature.
Zhan Ziqian was a painter during the Sui Dynasty. His only painting in
existence is Strolling About In Spring arranged mountains perspectively. Because
the first pure scenery paintings of Europe emerged after the 17th century,
Strolling About In Spring may well be the first scenery painting of the
world.
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