google.com, pub-0288379932320714, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 GRAVIR LES MONTAGNES... EN PEINTURE: THE WULING MOUNTAINS / 武陵山脉 PAINTED BY TANI BUNCHŌ / 谷 文晁

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

THE WULING MOUNTAINS / 武陵山脉 PAINTED BY TANI BUNCHŌ / 谷 文晁


 

TANI BUNCHŌ  / 谷 文晁 (1763-1841)
Wuling mountains / 武陵山脉 ( 2,570 m (8,430 ft)
China

In Earthly Paradise of Wuling (detail), ink on silk screen, circa 1785

The mountains
Wuling mountains / 武陵山脉 ( 2,570 m (8,430 ft) are a mountain range located in Central China, running from Chongqing Municipality and East Guizhou to West Hunan.   Fanjingshan or Mount Fanjing, is the highest peak in the Wuling Mountain range,  located in Guizhou province,  The Fanjingshan National Nature Reserve was established in 1978.
The Wuling mountains are home to many ethnic groups, including as the Tujia, Han, Miao, Dong, and Bai.
The Wulingyuan Scenic and Historic Interest Area is a UNESCO World Heritage site in the Wuling Mountain Range noted for its more than 3,000 quartzite sandstone pillars and peaks across most of the site, along with many ravines and gorges between them with streams, pools and waterfalls. It was designated a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in 1986 and a World Heritage site in 2018.


The painter
Tani Bunchō (谷 文晁) was a Japanese literati (bunjin) painter and poet.
 In his youth he began studying the painting techniques of the Kanō school under Katō Bunrei (1706–82). After Bunrei's death, Bunchō worked with masters of other schools, such as the literati painter Kitayama Kangen (1767–1801), and developed a wide stylistic range that included many Chinese, Japanese and European idioms.
Unlike most bunjinga painters of his time, however, Bunchō was an extremely eclectic artist, painting idealized Chinese landscapes, actual Japanese sites, and poetically-inspired traditional scenery. He also painted portraits of his contemporaries (such as Ono Ranzan and Kimura Kenkadō), as well as imagined images of such Chinese literati heroes as Su Shi and Tao Yuanming. Since travel outside Japan was forbidden under the Tokugawa shogunate, Bunchō was unable to study in China; he spent many years traveling around Japan, studying Chinese, Japanese, and Western art .

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2019 - Wandering Vertexes...
by Francis Rousseau