Sung Dynasty Chinese Art - 960-1279 AD

Fan Kuan, "Traveling amid Streams and Mountains"
(National Palace Museum, Taipei)
Landscape painting got even better under the Sung Dynasty than it had been under the T'ang Dynasty that came before. Artists emphasized the simple lines of the mountains, rivers, and trees, trying to create a feeling with the fewest possible lines. Most of the time they didn't even use colors. Artists also learned to show distance with blurry outlines and mountains half-hidden by fog.

Cui Bai, "Two Jays and a Hare"
(National Palace Museum, Taipei)
Artists sometimes put people in their pictures, but the people were small and unimportant - what really counted was nature. This idea was developed from Taoist and Confucian philosophical ideas about how the world worked. It was important to these artists to show how nature and man worked together in peace.

Wen Tong, "Branch of Bamboo"
(National Palace Museum, Taipei)
Starting about 1200 AD, artists became interested in drawing smaller objects: a flower, or a bird, or a leaf. Again, they tried to draw these things using the fewest possible lines, and to show the most important things about that flower or bird, rather than drawing every detail.

"Auspicious Dragon", said to be by Emperor Hui-Tsung
(Palace Museum, Bejing)
One of the artists who was best at painting flowers was the Emperor Hui-tsung. He opened a school for painters, and many famous painters came from that school.
Another group of Sung Dynasty painters were Zen Buddhists, who tried to paint their ideas of calm and peacefulness with quick, clean brushwork.

The boddhisatva Avalokitesvara, with a thousand arms
and a thousand eyes, about 950 AD (Musee Guimet, Paris)
Sung Dynasty dragon, in silver with gold and turquoise inlays (Musee Guimet, Paris)
Sung Dynasty vase (Musee Guimet, Paris)
To find out more about Sung Dynasty art, check out these books from Amazon.com or from your library:
The British Museum Book of Chinese Art, by Jessica Rawson and others (1996). Rawson is a curator at the British Museum, and she uses the collection of the British Museum to illustrate this book. Library Journal calls it "easily the best introductory overview of Chinese art to appear in years".
Art in China (Oxford History of Art Series), by Craig Clunas (1997). Not specifically for kids, but a good introduction to the spirit of Chinese art. Warning: this one is not arranged in chronological order. Instead, it has chapters on sculpture, calligraphy, and so on.
Yuan Dynasty (Mongol period) art
More on China in the Sung Dynasty

