Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Chinese Lotus Painting

Lotus is a kind of beautiful plant that its flower and seeds are growing at the same time
Lotus flower is one of the Eight Treasures of Buddhism. Some buddhist deities have lotus-shaped foundation, and lotus flower is regarded as a symbol of the Pure Land in Buddhism and represents the Buddha's noble and holy characters. Lotus flower image almost becomes the sign of Buddhism.
Auspicious &Fengshui Meaning
Chinese Lotus Painting: "lotus" sounds "lian" in Chinese, which is homonymous with "connect", so it is very auspicious to hang the lotus painting in house(especially in the Japanese style rooms). It symbolizes "having lovely babies" or "happy and harmonious as you wishes".
Chinese Fish & Lotus Fengshui Painting: Fish flirting with lotuses. This combination has the meaning of "living in affluence" and "every year may you always get more than you wish for". In ancient China, the lotus represented the female and the fish the male, so this combination also implied the connection of male and female.
Chinese Mandarin Duck and Lotus Painting. A pair of mandarin ducks, lotus flower and seeds. The mandarin ducks often apprear in pairs, so they symbolize the perfect couple since ancient China, and they are regarded as an auspicious symbol of love and marriage. Lotus seed symbolizes "having lovely babies". This combination implies a perfect couple living in harmony and mutual respect and growing old together.
Chinese Egret /and Reed and Lotus Painting. "Egret" and "road", "lotus" and "connect", "reed" and "road" are homonyms in Chinese, and reed is often growing together with lotus in groups(in Chinese, it sounds like the word "lian ke"), so this combination symbolizes "success in the imperial examinations again and again" and "having a successful official career".
Chinese Lotus and Sweet Osmanthus(Osmanthus fragrans) Painting. Lotus's flower and seeds are growing together, and "seed" sounds the same as the word "child" in Chinese, "sweet osmanthus" and "nobility", so this combination symbolizes the perfect marriage and the prosperous family.
A child holding a Carp and a Lotus Painting. "Fish" is homonymous with "surplus" in Chinese, while "lotus" with "harmony", so this combination symbolizes "living in affluence", "living in a wealthy family". It expresses Chinese ancient people's good wishes for the affluence and abundance year after year.
To the Chinese, the lotus is the most important of all the cultivated flowers, grown for both its beauty and its usefulness. It has large blossoms, tinted pink, creamy white or yellow, growing on stalks six or seven feet high, appearing from the centre of very broad, (sometimes three feet in diameter), nasturtium-shaped leaves.

Every part of this plant has special use; the fruits and leaves are used as food; the dried yellow stamens are used as an astringent and as cosmetic; the seeds can be used as medicine or eaten as a dessert. The kernels are boiled in soup, roasted or eaten raw, while the stems are sliced and boiled. The leaves can be taken medicinally or used dried to wrap food.

The lotus is also known as a symbol of purity and perfection, growing out of the mud into a state of blossoming beauty and fruitfulness. The flowers are open for a mere three days, then petal by petal they disintegrate, leaving the green seed head exposed.

It has become very positively connected to Buddhism, partly because of the symbolism; partly because of the visual representation of the Wheel of the Law by the flower form, with the petals taking the place of the spokes. Buddha is usually represented as seated on the sacred lotus and, in imitation of this, Buddhist priests have developed the 'lotus posture' - a cramped position which develops a state of bodily peace. The flower is also one of the eight treasures', said to be auspicious signs seen on the sole of Buddha's foot.

It is not only a symbol important to Buddhists, that the lotus is recognized, but also as an emblem of one of the Eight Immortals of Taoism - the other main Chinese religion. The seed-cup on the lotus stem, holding as it does many seeds, becomes and emblem of offspring. The lotus is also regarded as representing summer and fruitfulness; it appears in stylized form in paintings, in embroidery, on carpets and as ceramic decorations.

Although it is not an easy flower to paint, mainly because of the disproportionate size of the leaves and the fact that Western painter may well never have seen a lotus bloom, it is the most important flower in Chinese traditional painting and as such is well demonstrated by the power and versatility of shades of black.

Painting the lotus
1.Plan the composition so that spaces are left for crossing leaves and stems.
2.Paint the pod heads first by outlining the seed pod and the tiny circular seeds.
3.Seed pods on their own should have a space left at the base so that the stalks can be joined correctly.
4.If the seed pods are still surrounded by the petals of the flower, then the petals grow from the base of the pod and over-lapping must be planned before the outlines are painted.
5.The flower petals are finely veined and, although it is not necessary to show them, light-toned, thin ink lines can be included.
6.The leaves can be shown in various stages and positions as they unfold.
7.On the large leaves, the veins radiate from the centre of each leaf and alternate veins 'fork' as they approach the leaf edge.
8.The leaf stalks are darker than the flower stalks. Each flower, bud and leaf has its own individual stalk.Each flower, bud and leaf has its own individual stalk.


Reference:http://www.cnartgallery.com/lotus-c-46_100.html

The Leading Chinese Painting Supplier in China Have Huge Selection of Original Chinese Art Painting.

No comments:

Post a Comment