From its emergence to maturity,
Chinese painting stretches over a long period that dates back to the remote
Neolithic Age (8,000-5,500BC). The working early human produced practical
utensils and structures with decorative designs that engendered the earliest
consciousness about painting composition.
As a wall ornament, the silk
painting, which contains characters of early Chinese painting, emerged in the
Warring States Period (403-221BC). Representatives of such works include
Lady, Dragon and Phoenix Painting and Man Driving the
Dragon, which were unearthed in Changsha
City, Hunan Province. Both pieces were used at funerals to lead the dead to
heaven. The Lady, Dragon and Phoenix Painting depicted stories of the deceased in the tomb. The matching of colors
-- black and white, the contrast of false and truth, movement and stillness --
are striking. The Man Driving the Dragon depicts a bearded man wearing in
a robe with a dragon beside him and a white bird standing on his tail, which
demonstrates the noble status of the deceased. Among the remaining paintings are
the excellent representative works of the Han Dynasty, when elaborate funerals
were popular, like the one unearthed in the Mawangdui Han Dynasty tomb in
Changsha City. The silk painting contains three parts:
the Heaven, World and Hell. The Heaven is a horizontal scroll, while the others
are vertical, wishing the deceased spirit entered Heaven.
The discovery of the silk paintings provided
important historical materials for researching the development of traditional
painting.