In this guide, we'll be giving an overview of the art styles, mediums and art techniques of South, East, and Southeast Asia.
There are a lot of different art forms and styles from this region because it's so big. Here are just a few important examples to keep in mind when you're thinking about attribution questions.
Most of the buildings in this unit are temples with carved figures made of wood or stone.
Paintings tend to be two-dimensional, without the scale and perspective of European paintings.
Paintings tend to be in ink on paper or silk, not paint. This means that you'll tend to see flat colors with minimal shading, and no large brushstrokes or textured canvases.
Paintings will often be accompanied by calligraphy, such as in 203. Night Attack on the Sanjô Palace.
Distinctive art forms from South, East, and Southeast Asia include...
monochromatic ink painting on silk and paper, which developed in China.
the pagoda, an architectural style based on Chinese watchtowers and inspired by Buddhist stupas.
Painting in this unit usually takes two forms: wall painting and manuscript or album painting.
The wall paintings such as 205. Portrait of Sin Sukju (1417–1475) would have been hung up... on a wall, and may have been used for ancestor worship, while the manuscript or album paintings would have been shown to people at private events. Some paintings, such as 203. Night Attack on the Sanjô Palace, were so long that they would have been rolled out, bit by bit, for people to admire.
As mentioned before, the painting styles that developed in India and East Asia favor contour drawing of forms over modeling. This means that figures were depicted through an emphasis on lines rather than in the three dimensional modeling format you'll see in Renaissance paintings. You won't find the heavy emphasis on contrast (chiaroscuro) or the hazy outlines (sfumato) of other European art.
A special ink-related art form highly emphasized in Units 7 and 8 is calligraphy. Calligraphy was an important art form in these regions. In Islamic art and Chinese art, calligraphy was at times considered the highest art form! Islamic calligraphy is often used to write out lines from the Qur'an; in Chinese art, you'll often see lines of poetry accompanying artworks.
Calligraphy was also prominent in Islamic art in Asia (in AP Art History, this mainly applies to Mughal India), and is found on architecture, decorative arts objects, and ceramic tiles, and in manuscripts.
Ceramic arts have flourished in Asia since the prehistoric era, and they're the reason that we call China china! Many advancements in ceramic work were developed in this region.
In AP Art History, we discus two major ceramic works from China: 193. Terra cotta warriors from mausoleum of the first Qin emperor of China and 204. The David Vases.
Compare and Contrast Question: How do the ceramics works from China compare to the ceramics from other units, such as the Niobid Krater?
Another material used for a similar function is metal, used to create sculpture, arms and armor, and famous ritual vessels.
This unit contains a lot of monumental architecture in the form of temples, palaces, and tombs.
Temples are a major part of this unit's architecture. In this unit, they tend to be in stone or wood. Furthermore, you'll see a lot of stone and wood carving in the temples of this unit. These take the form of relifs (carvings etched into the wall) and/or statues.
Rock-cut caves containing Buddhist imagery, shrines and monastic spaces span across Asia: In this Unit, you'll be learning about the 195. Longmen Caves in modern China.
You can generally split South and Southeast Asian buildings in a separate category from the East Asian buildings we're studing in this unit. East Asian buildings of this unit have a great deal of Chinese influence; you'll see the triangular tile roofs of Todai-ji in the Forbidden City as well.
At last, we come to textile works: an important but often overlooked aspect of art!
Important textile forms from this region include:
We focus on two textile (or textile-related) art pieces in this Unit: 194. Funeral banner of Lady Dai (Xin Zhui) and 205. Portrait of Sin Sukju (1417–1475). The Funeral Banner of Lady Dai is painted silk. While the portrait isn't a textile work outright, a significant part of that image is the embroidery on Sin Sukju's chest, representing his rank badge.