The Painter's Practice: How Artists Lived and Worked in Traditional China / Edition 1

The Painter's Practice: How Artists Lived and Worked in Traditional China / Edition 1

by James Cahill
ISBN-10:
0231081812
ISBN-13:
9780231081818
Pub. Date:
05/04/1995
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
ISBN-10:
0231081812
ISBN-13:
9780231081818
Pub. Date:
05/04/1995
Publisher:
Columbia University Press
The Painter's Practice: How Artists Lived and Worked in Traditional China / Edition 1

The Painter's Practice: How Artists Lived and Worked in Traditional China / Edition 1

by James Cahill

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Overview

In The Painter's Practice, James Cahill reveals the intricacies of the painter's life with respect to payment and patronage—an approach that is still largely absent from the study of East Asian art. Drawing upon such unofficial archival sources as diaries and letters, Cahill challenges the traditional image of the disinterested amateur scholar-artist, unconcerned with material rewards, that has been developed by China's literati, perpetuated in conventional biographies, and abetted by the artists themselves. His work fills in the hitherto unexplored social and economic contexts in which painters worked, revealing the details of how painters in China actually made their living from the sixteenth century onward. Considering the marketplace as well as the studio, Cahill reviews the practices and working conditions of artists outside the Imperial Court such as the employment of assistants and the use of sketchbooks and prints by earlier artists for sources of motifs. As loose, flamboyant brushwork came into vogue, Cahill argues, these highly imitable styles ironically facilitated the forger's task, flooding the market with copies, sometimes commissioned and signed by the artists themselves. In tracing the great shift from seeing the painting as a picture to a concentration on the painter's hand, Cahill challenges the archetype of the scholar-artist and provides an enlightened perspective that profoundly changes the way we interpret familiar paintings.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780231081818
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Publication date: 05/04/1995
Series: Bampton Lectures in America Series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 187
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x (d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

James Cahill is professor of art history at the University of California, Berkeley. His most recent book is The Compelling Image: Nature and Style in Seventeenth-Century Chinese Painting, which won the Charles Rufus Morey Award of the College Art Association.

Table of Contents

Preface
1. Adjusting Our Image of the Chinese Artist
2. The Painter's Livelihood
3. The Painter's Studio
4. The Painter's Hand
Notes
Bibliography (Works in English)
Illustrations
Index

What People are Saying About This

Jonathan D. Spence

The myth of the literatus-painter, true to himself at all times and creating his master-pieces without regard to the vexations and demands of everyday life, has been cherished for a millennium in China. In the Painter's Practice James Cahill imaginatively conjures up the reality behind this myth. He shows us the world of household painting workshops and paid "ghostpainters," of go-betweens, forgers, and commission agents, of studios and display techniques, and of payments for paintings that range from fruitcakes, medicines, and building materials to rare antiques and glamorous concubines.

Jonathan D. Spence, Yale University

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