In his early years Zhang DaqianY figure and lady paintings resembled
the styles of Ming and Qing dynasties. His figure paintings transformed
and matured after his two trips to Dunhuang where he spent great efforts
to copy and study the murals. He had travelled there in 1941 and 1943
and stayed there for 31 months. He had copied more that 270 murals with
his students and followers.
The Mogao
Grottoes were in the southeast of Dunhuang, at the foot of Mingsha
Mountain. The thousands of murals in the Mogao Grottoes ranged from Wei
to Song dynasty. For thousands of years, the place had been deserted
until some Westerners came in 1900 and 1907 and stole the relics away,
hence the treasures in Dunhuang became known to the world.
The Mogao
Grottoes were built before the Sui dynasty. All the murals in them
inherited the traditional style of Han dynasty folk paintings. Paintings
in the Northern Qi period brought forth a sudden conspicuous change
which was linked to the literary paintings of the south. Gu Kaizhi of
the Eastern Jin dynasty became a leader of the new style.
Zhang
Daqian said when he first encountered the Dunhuang murals, he felt
dazzled and confused. He found his previous study of ancient works quite
inadequate. Zhang met a number of problems when he began copying the
murals. All the grottoes faced east, hence they became completely dark
in the afternoon and copying work could only be done in the morning. The
silk and paper they brought from Chengdu were too small and had to be
sewn or glued together for the huge paintings. The seams affected the
pictures. The ordinary colours they brought looked dim and gloomy when
compared to the original colours of the murals.
To solve
the problems, Zhang sent his son Zhang Xinzhi to Xining with two other
persons. They invited the lama painters from the monastery to join them
in Dunhuang. The lama painters could draw religious paintings, they
could also make colours and sew canvas. They treated the canvas in a
special way so that it looked similar to the ancient paintings. The
special colours they made were also close to those on the murals.
As there
was a lot of copying work to do, Zhang could only drew the outlines
himself and let the lamas did the colouring. One day when Zhang was
working in grotto numbered 20, he suddenly discovered that at the right
bottom corner where the mural was torn, there seemed to be colours and
lines underneath. After repeated discussions with his students, they
decided to tear down the outer layer. When they did, they found a richly
coloured Tang dynasty mural beneath the outer layer. Zhang described the
event in an article later.
Zhang
Daqian spent a long time in Dunhuang. He was completely overcome with
admiration for the glamorous Tang murals. He studied them hard and
copied them, hence his later figure paintings were in the Tang dynasty
style. They became marvellous in spirit.
Zhang
Daqian had said that according to his own experience, one should first
work on outlines, then on sketching before one turned onto freehand
style. He said one should start by copying ancient masterpieces in order
to develop oneY outlining skills and understand the painting rules.
He summarised his experiences into the following points:
1.
copy and outline to learn the rules
2.
sketch, observe and understand the objects
3.
set the inner meaning of the picture
4.
develop an innovative atmosphere
5.
pursue an elegant style
6.
avoid unnecessary and improper details
7.
place the spirit and mood in the first priority, the second priority is
the composition
8.
capture the spirit of the objects and does not contradict the natural
rules
9.
not to be arrogant for oneY talent
10.
copy ancient masters and learn their essence, but does not steal from
their works
Apart from doing
ordinary lady paintings, Zhang Daqian had later gone to sketch in Tibet.
He drew many outstanding pieces on Tibetan women which revealed
techniques and atmospheres learned from the Dunhuang murals.
Zhang had said
that painting should not achieve too close a likeness with the real
object, yet there should not be deliberate unlikeness. One had to strike
a balance between likeness and unlikeness for conveying the natural
beauty. This was the art of painting.
XIE ZHILIU
In Saintings of Famous Modern
Chinese Artists -Zhang Daqian, Recluse Paintings by Xie Zhiliu,
recorded by Zhou Kewen, published on 1 June 1994, Han Mo Xuan
Publishing Co., Ltd.