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The History of Engraving in China
  Engraving
occupies an important position in Chinese fine arts and has a unique
charm. With a history of 1,000 odd years, this ancient art has formed a
classical yet modern artistic style.
Engraving makes up an important part of Chinese fine arts. Ancient
engraving mainly involved woodcuts together with copperplates and
colored bites. These unique methods give it an independent artistic
value and position in China's cultural and artistic history.
China's earliest extant engraving was made in the year 868. The works of
engraving created in the Tang Dynasty (618-907) and the Five Dynasties
(907-960) have been discovered in the northwest and southeast. Focusing
on religion, they are of primitive simplicity.
The Buddhist engravings during the Song Dynasty (960-1279) and Yuan
dynasties (1206-1368) achieved further progress and the works were
perfected. Landscape pictures started to emerge. Scientific,
technological and literary books and picture albums contained a large
amount of works of discharge printing. Due to practical requirements,
copperplate printing appeared in the Song Dynasty to print paper
currency and advertisements.
The Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1616-1911) dynasties were peak times for
the development of engraving in China. With the joint efforts of many
scholars, book merchants and engraving flourished. Not only religious
engraving reached its climax in the Ming Dynasty but picturesque
engraving did, too. The number of best picture copybooks, novels,
dramas, biographies and poems cannot be counted. With different
editions, the engraving plates of well-known literary works became
numerous and influential.
Different schools of engraving prospered in the Ming and Qing dynasties.
The works of the Jian'an School of Jianyang in Fujian, mostly created by
folk craftsmen, were simple and unsophisticated. The works of the
Jinling School of Nanjing concentrated on dramas and novels. The works
of Wuling School of Hangzhou had unlimited subjects and fine carvings
and the Hui School of Huizhou in Anhui had a lasting effect on and a
vital position in China's cultural history. |