Steps of landscape painting
1. Outline, prioritize and summarize the outline.
2. Rubbing to supplement the skeleton and express the veins.
3. Dot dyeing to enrich the layers and supplement the picture.
4. Adjust, add details and leave the eyes blank.
5. The coloring is completed
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Landscape painting, referred to as "landscape", is a type of Chinese painting that depicts the natural scenery of mountains and rivers as the main subject. Landscape painting occupies an important position in the history of Chinese painting. It can be divided into green landscape, ink landscape, light crimson landscape, small green landscape and boneless landscape. It is an extremely distinctive art in oriental painting. Representative painters include Zhan Ziqian, Wang Wei, Fan Kuan and Zhang Hong.
Landscape painting is one of the traditional categories of Chinese painting. In the early period, landscape was mainly the background of figure painting. During the Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties, it gradually became independent from figure painting. During the Sui and Tang Dynasties, it formed a separate category in Chinese painting. Wu Daozi and Li Sixun , Wang Wei and others are all good at painting landscape paintings. Since the Tang Dynasty, landscape painters have been divided into southern and northern schools. The founder of the northern school is Li Sixun, a painter of the Tang Dynasty. He is good at using colors and mainly paints the landscapes of Guanluo area on both sides of the Yellow River. Li Cheng, Fan Kuan, Zhang Zeduan, Li Tang, Ma Yuan and others belonged to the Northern School.
Wang Wei, the founder of the Southern School, was good at using ink and less color. Mi Fu, Wang Ximeng, Zhao Boju and others belonged to the Southern School. Mi Fu and his son created the rice point landscape painting to express the state of misty rain and meng in the south of the Yangtze River. Wang Ximeng, Zhao Boju and others were good at painting green landscapes. In the Song Dynasty, landscape painting was very popular. From princes and nobles to literati and merchants, they were all willing to decorate their halls with landscape paintings. Landscape painting in the Yuan Dynasty focused on freehand brushwork. The famous painters include Huang Gongwang, Wu Zhen, Ni Zan, and Wang Meng, who are known as the Four Painters of the Yuan Dynasty. Landscape painting continued to develop during the Ming and Qing Dynasties.