CHINA AND KOREA TO 1279 GARDNER 7-3 PP. 196-204. SONG DYNASTY  The Song Dynasty (Northern 960- 1126 and Southern 1129-1279) began in 960 when Zhao Kuangyin.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Period of Disunion After the fall of the Han Dynasty China split in to rival kingdoms. This period was filled with war. Many nomadic people settled.
Advertisements

Chinese Art Chapter 7.
Chinese Art Japanese Art Images you must learn. In order of importance……
Chapter 12 Section 1.
REPRESENTATIVE EARLY EAST ASIAN ART: CHINA EUGENIA LANGAN MATER ACADEMY CHARTER HIGH SCHOOL HIALEAH GARDENS, FLORIDA.
Chapter 12 Section 1 (22 Slides) 1.
Mongols, and the T’ang, S’ung, and Yuan dynasties Mongols are the glue that brings East and West together – how did that happen? Chapter 12:1, 2, 3.
Chinese and Korean Art Before 1279
12.5 Kingdoms of Southeast Asia and Korea
The Mongol Empire Chapter Ghengis Khan The Mongol Empire The Mongols came from present-day Mongolia. They were organized loosely into clans. Temujin.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Korean History and Culture.
Objectives Describe how geography affected life on the Korean peninsula. Understand the influence of China and Buddhism on Korea. Explain the major achievements.
Chapter 7: China and Korea to 1279
Art of the FAR EAST Chapter 5. … about 3,ooo B.C. the Chinese culture began to emerge half a world away from Egypt. Egypt CHINA.
Period of Disunion 220 – 589: After the fall of the Han Dynasty China split into rival kingdoms This period was filled with war Many nomadic people settled.
Soldiers. Qin Dynasty, c. 210 BCE.. Bowl. Neolithic period, 5000–4000 BCE. Height 7”.
Chapter 11: Cultures of East Asia
Art Of China and Japan. Art Of China Chinese Civilization retain many of its ancient traditions today. Beginning 4,000 years ago, iti s the oldest continuous.
Hannah Bauman Ben Clark Erika Fischer J.P. Wojciechowski KOREA.
Mongol Empire and Ming Dynasty
Chapter 11 Section 3.  Archipelago  Shinto  Prince Shotoku  Lady Murasaki Shikibu  Koryo Dynasty.
Ancient China What you should know….
Tang & Song Dynasty : Sui Dynasty lasts for two emperors and falls : Tang Dynasty rules for nearly 300 years : The Song dynasty rules,
Dynasties of China Global Studies 9 Mrs. Hart, Mrs. Costello, Ms. Soddano, and Mrs. Suto.
Chapter 9, Lesson 1 Korea: History & Culture
Objectives Summarize how Mongol armies built an empire.
MONGOL CONQUESTS CHAPTER 12, SECTIONS 2&3.
The Mongol and Ming Empires
APRIL 17 – AP COMP GOV – DYNASTIC HISTORY Agenda: Comparison: Population Control in Iran and China Notes: Dynastic History of China Homework: Read p
THE SPREAD OF CIVILIZATIONS IN EAST ASIA BY MORGAN BIEKER.
Windows on the World extras. Templo Mayor; Height: 60m/197ft The gods: Huitzilopochtli and Tlaloc; Completed: 1497 Materials: Built of stone and covered.
Art & Architecture of Ancient China 1600 BCE – 1279 CE.
Chapter Seventeen China and Korea Prepared by Kelly Donahue-Wallace Randal Wallace University of North Texas Gardner's Art through the Ages, Concise Edition.
Monday The Art of China P.P. Q & A’s over Non-Western Project Essays and Printed Outlines All due Wednesday. Presentations Wednesday & Thursday Unit 3.
The Mongol and Ming Empires. Mongols  Nomadic people who lived in the steppes of Central Asia  Under Genghis Khan, cast empire stretched from the Pacific.
CHINA AND KOREA TO 1279 GARDNER 7-2 PP
Mongols.
South, East & Southeast Asia 300 BCE CE. Enduring Understandings Arts in these areas represent some of the worlds oldest, most diverse, and most.
The Mongols and China Chapter 8-2. The Mongols The Mongols were a pastoral people who rose to power in a very quick & swift manor throughout Asia They.
Left: Sakyamuni Buddha (late Zhau dynasty, Period of Disunity), 338, gilded bronze Right: Colossal Buddha Amitabha (Northern Wei period), (Yungang, China),
What Chinese dynasties have we already talked about? and What did they accomplish? 5 minutes to discuss.
Golden Age of. Fall of the Han Dynasty ( CE) Years of chaos and confusion followed this dynasty. Barbarian invasions in the north over the Gobi.
Chapter 7 China and Korea to 1279
CHAPTER 11 CHINESE AND KOREAN ART. REGION HISTORY The Chinese record their own history as a succession of ruling dynasties that begins in
Windows on the World China and Korea. estern Han painting on silk was found draped over the coffin in the grave of Lady Dai (c. 168 BC) at Mawangdui.
Chapter 10 EARLY CHINA AND KOREA. Neolithic China instructional1.calstatela.edu/bevans/Art101/A... faculty.cva.edu
South, East, and Southeast Asia Content Great Stupa at Sanchi Madhya Pradesh, India. Buddhist; Maurya, late Sunga Dynasty. c. 300 B.C.E
THE MONGOL & MING EMPIRES
Korea Chapter 10. History of Korea  Three Kingdoms  And that is it!!!!!
By: Anahi Rodriguez, Yesica Ruiz, Ryan Hatten
Objectives Summarize how Mongol armies built an empire.
The Mongol Empire Origins: The Mongols were clans of nomads in northern Asia who subsisted by raising livestock and traveled and fought primarily on.
CHINA AND KOREA TO 1279 GARDNER 7-2 PP
Dynastic Rule in China The basis for united Chinese government was established during the Han Dynasty, when people living in northern and southern China.
The Mongols and China Chapter 8 Section 2.
Period of Disunion 220 – 589: After the fall of the Han Dynasty China split into rival kingdoms This period was filled with war Many nomadic people settled.
POST-CLASSICAL PERIOD
The Mongols and China Chapter 8 Section 2.
Japan and Korea Chapter 11 Section 3.
CHINA AND KOREA TO 1279 GARDNER 7-3 PP
The Mongols Genghis & Kublai Khan.
The Spread of Civilization in East and Southeast Asia
Stokstad: chapters 10 and 21
Stokstad: chapters 10 and 21
Medieval China.
Korean History and Culture
No Warm-up Take a handout from the grey table and have a seat.
Yuan and Ming Dynasties
Chapter 11: Cultures of East Asia
The Mongol Empire Unit 2: Empires.
Presentation transcript:

CHINA AND KOREA TO 1279 GARDNER 7-3 PP

SONG DYNASTY  The Song Dynasty (Northern and Southern ) began in 960 when Zhao Kuangyin consolidated control and became the first Song Emperor  The three centuries of Song rule were a time of technological innovation, centrally controlled army and bureaucracy, and problems with northern nomads

FAN KUAN  Detail of Travelers among Mountains and Streams, Northern Song Period, early 11 th century, hanging scroll, ink and colors on silk  Song Dynasty is high point of Chinese painting  Fan Kuan was a Daoist recluse and master of landscape painting  One of the first masters of light, shade, distance, and texture -> tributes to nature not portraits of specific places  Vertical landscape with massive mountains rising in background and tiny mule train in lower right corner FLASHCARD #201

HUIZONG  Attributed to Huizong, Auspicious Cranes, Northern Song Period, 1112, section of a handscroll, ink and colors on silk  CALLIGRAPHY = the art of writing, highly esteemed in China throughout its history  This scroll is attributed to the Emperor Huizong and displays his mastery as painter and calligrapher

FOGUANG SI PAGODA  View of Foguang Si Pagoda, Yingxian, China, Liao dynasty, 1056  PAGODA = tower -> the building type most associated with Buddhism in China and East Asia  Pagodas housed Buddhist relics, images, texts, and provided a focus for devotion  This is the tallest wooden building in the world -> nine story octagonal -> beam-and-bracket construction

SOUTHERN SONG PERIOD  MA YUAN Contrast this with Fan Kuan’s Travelers among Mountains and Streams  LIANG KAI Religious painting -> master of the expressive style of ink painting -> found favor among Chan monks -> depicts the “Chan moment” when the chopping sound of his blade propelled the patriarch to enlightenment  ZHOU JICHANG Painter of Buddhist themes -> hanging scroll called Lohans Giving Alms to Beggars -> bright lohans above ragged scrambling beggars

CHAN BUDDHISM  A new type of Buddhism developed during the Song Dynasty and second only to Neo- Confucianism in importance  The means of enlightenment lies within the individual -> meditation is the key practice -> “Northern School” said enlightenment came slow after long meditation/”Southern School” said break through to enlightenment can be sudden and spontaneous

KOREA  Korea is a northeast Asian peninsula that shares borders w/China and Russia and faces Japan  Korea is influenced by both China and Japan  Korean art is based on Chinese models but has a distinct identity

THREE KINGDOMS PERIOD  Gold and jade crown, Three Kingdoms Period, Silla Kingdom, Korea, 5 th to 6 th century CE -> from a Silla tomb -> evidence of the wealth of kingdom and skill of artist -> uprights may be stylized tree or antler forms symbolizing life and supernatural power  The Three Kingdoms Period lasted from 57 BCE to 688 CE -> native kingdoms  During this period Korea was in contact with both China and Japan  Buddhism was introduced to Korea from China in the 4 th century then the Koreans spread it to Japan in the 6 th century FLASHCARD 196

UNIFIED SILLA KINGDOM  Shakyamuni Buddha, in the rotunda of the cave temple, Sokkuram, Korea, Unified Silla CE, granite, 11” high  In 688 the Silla Kingdom conquered the other two to create a Unified Silla Kingdom which ruled from 688 to 935  Unlike the rock-cut Chinese shrines, the Korean cave temple at Sokkuram was constructed using granite blocks -> dominating the rotunda is huge statue of Buddha at the moment of enlightenment

KORYO DYNASTY  Maebyong vase, Koryo dynasty, ca , Celadon with inlaid decoration 16 ½ “ tall  KORYO DYNASTY CE -> replaced the Great Silla w/out conflict  In 1231, the Mongols, who had invaded China, pushed into Korea and in 1261 Korea submits to the Mongols  CELADON = type of ceramic pottery that features translucent iron- pigmented glazes with incised/engraved designs invented by Koryo potters in the 12 th century

CHAPTER 27 – CHINA AND KOREA AFTER 1279  Kublai Khan, Genghis Khan’s grandson, founded the Yuan Dynasty and established a “Pax Mongolica” that created an environment for flourishing trade after the chaos of the Mongolian invasions ->  These vases, known as the David Vases after a former owner who reunited them in 1935, are among the very earliest known blue and white porcelain wares. They date to the Yuan Dynasty, 1351arguably the most important blue and white porcelain to exist. FLASHCARD #204

CHINESE PORCELAIN  Porcelain ceramics, often simply referred to as china, immediately conjure up notions of a Chinese aesthetic and artisanal tradition, and nothing seems more quintessentially Chinese than the blue and white patterns that decorate so many porcelain wares’ surfaces.  What is undisputedly Chinese is the origin of porcelain itself. It is created by firing clay at extremely high temperatures, between 1200—1400 degrees Celsius. This process creates an exceptionally hard and shiny ceramic ware that is able to hold water, unlike other porous clay wares.

 painting depicts Sin Sukju ( ) as a “meritorious subject,” or an official honored for his distinguished service at court and loyalty to the king  This painting shows Sin Sukju dressed in his official robes with a black silk hat on his head  Although portraiture conventions, such as the attire and posture of the sitter, were quite formulaic, the facial features were painted with the goal of transmitting a sense of unique, physical likeness. This careful attention to the sitter’s face, such as wrinkles and bone structure, served the Korean belief that the face could reveal important clues about the subject  Skilled in capturing the likeness of the sitter while still adhering to pictorial conventions, artists in the Royal Bureau of Painting (a government agency staffed with artists) created portraits of officials awarded this honorary title. These paintings would be cherished by their families and worshipped for generations to follow FLASHCARD #205

MING DYNASTY ( )

FORBIDDEN CITY FLASHCARD 206-1

FORBIDDEN CITY – FRONT GATE FLASHCARD 206-2

FORBIDDEN CITY – HALL OF SUPREME HARMONY FLASHCARD 206-3

FORBIDDEN CITY – THE PALACE OF TRANQUILITY AND LONGEVITY FLASHCARD 206-4

FORBIDDEN CITY - PLAN FLASHCARD #206-5

CHAIRMAN MAO EN ROUTE TO ANYUAN FLASHCARD #212