Engineering:Caihua

From HandWiki

Caihua (Chinese: 彩畫; pinyin: cǎihuà), or "colour painting", is the traditional Chinese decorative painting or polychrome used for architecture and one of the most notable and important features of historical Chinese architecture. It held a significant artistic and practical role within the development of East-Asian architecture, as Caihua served not only decoration but also protection of the predominantly wooden architecture from various seasonal elements and hid the imperfections of the wood itself. The use of different colours or paintings would be according to the particular building functions and local regional customs, as well as historical periods. The choice of colours and symbology are based on traditional Chinese philosophies of the Five Elements and other ritualistic principles. [1][2] The Caihua is often separated into three layer structures; timber or lacquer layer, plaster layer, and pigment layer.[citation needed]

History

The origins of Caihua can be traced back to the Zhou dynasty,[3][4] as the Zuo Zhuan and Guliang Zhuan detailed: Template:Translated blockquote

The Rites of Zhou similarly records a ritualistic usage of motifs and colour, based on each respective aspects' corresponding symbolic value.

See also

  • Hexi Caihua
  • Ancient Chinese wooden architecture
  • Chinese architecture
  • Yingzao Fashi
  • Architecture of the Song Dynasty
  • Dancheong

References

  1. 孙大章 (1991) (in Chinese). 建筑工业出版社. ISBN 7-112-07328-6. 
  2. 赵双成 (2006) (in Chinese). 天津大学出版社. ISBN 978-7561822494. 
  3. 刘敦桢 (Liu Dunzhen) (1991) (2 ed.). 中国建筑工业出版社; 第2版 (China Architecture Building Press). ISBN 9787112019298. 
  4. Flags, color, and the legal narrative : public memory, identity, and critique. Anne Wagner, Sarah Marusek. Cham, Switzerland: Springer. 2021. pp. 129. ISBN 978-3-030-32865-8. OCLC 1253353500.