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Yangjiabu. During the Anti-Japanese War of
Resistance the Chinese Communist Party realized the propaganda potential of "peasant art" and began to promote "New New Year pictures". The traditional industry, however, did not recover and was nearly extinguished by the 1960s. Following the Cultural Revolution efforts were made to recover New Year pictures as a heritage industry, and workshops can now be found in most of the larger production centers.
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The introduction of mechanized printing and changing aesthetic preferences in the early 20th century posed a serious challenge to New Year picture printers, and production declined until by the 1930s only a few workshops could be found in the formerly prosperous printing centers like
Yangliuqing and
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Commonly depicted immortals include Door Gods, Kitchen God, and God of Wealth. Auspicious symbols may include lions, tigers, deer, cranes, Phoenix and auspicious birds, lotus, peony and other flowers, money tree, pot of wealth and other objects that express wishes for good fortune and happiness.
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In some production centers, most notably
Yangliuqing, only the outline is printed while all of the colors are added manually. In other locations such as Mianzhu the pictures are drawn and colored entirely by hand. These traditional techniques survive in the present day, although most New Year
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Although there are few reliable records on which to base the early history of New Year pictures, Wang Shucun argues that they were popularized during the Ming dynasty. This development can be attributed to Ming government policy, the spread of popular novels, the development of
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Finally, the printer inks the outline block and presses paper onto its surface using a stiff brush. The procedure is repeated for each of the color blocks. In some cases color may be added by hand. The chromatic woodblock New Year picture is complete.
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Given the seasonal nature and ephemeral quality of New Year pictures, very few authentic examples can be dated to before the 19th century. Nonetheless, it is believed that the industry flourished from the late-Ming dynasty and throughout the Qing. In
168:, and railways. These themes and events have no connection with the New Year, and so the appropriateness of the New Year Picture nomenclature is questionable. Nonetheless, all images created by traditional printers are typically categorized as such.
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Chinese: 望房), an accountant’s office, guest rooms, and rooms for the workshop’s owner. The organization of the workshop indicates the New Year picture artisans’ business model, whereby the artisans both produce and market their wares.
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New Year pictures were printed throughout China. The best known production sites include
Yangliuqing (Tianjin), Yangjiabu (Shandong), Wuqiang (Hebei), Fengxiang (Shaanxi), Taohuawu (Suzhou), and Mianzhu (Sichuan).
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Madeline Yue Dong, “The
Fortunes of a Folk Tradition: Yangliuqing New Year’s Pictures,” in James Cook, Joshua Goldstein, Sigrid Schmalzer eds., Visualizing Modern China. Rowman and Littlefield, 2009.
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In the late-19th and early 20th century woodblock printers began to supplement traditional religious and folkloric themes with depictions of current events and modern themes including the
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Images of babies (typically male), alone or in the company of young mothers, are very common motifs, as are images of beauties, alone or in the company of babies.
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Some folk artists created idealized depictions of rural and domestic life showing productive agriculture, family life, festive customs, humorous anecdotes, etc.
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Production method: hand drawn pictures, woodblock printing, watermark trapping, Half-drawing and half-painting, lithography, offset printing and so on.
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a workshop built in the Ming dynasty has been connected with the local production of New Year pictures. It contains a production room, a display room
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techniques. and the development of large-scale production and marketing through New Year picture workshops (Chinese: 畫坊) (Pinyin:Huà fāng).
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James A. Flath, The Cult of
Happiness: Nianhua, Art, and History in Rural North China. University of British Columbia Press, 2004.
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arrives, every family replaces its New Year picture in order to "say goodbye to the Past and welcome the Future" (Chinese:
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The origins of the "New Year picture" are unknown, although the genre is thought to have begun with the printing of
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Holiday. In the 19th and 20th centuries some printers began to use the genre to depict current events.
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Narratives adapted from historical events, folk stories, myths, legends, novels, and dramas.
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The content of New Year pictures is diverse, but several main themes can be identified:
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pictures are now produced through chromolithography and color offset printing.
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428:. Vancouver; Seattle: UBC Press; University of Washington Press. p. 195.
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Usually, chromatic woodblock New Year picture production follows four steps:
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Third, separate blocks are carved for each of the colors to be added,
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31:'Honourable Offspring after Another'. Yangliuqing New Year Picture.
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New Year picture. The Spirit of the Doors woodblock print. 1900s
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New Year picture. Three
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Second, the rough sketch is carved in relief on a woodblock,
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The cult of happiness: art, and history in rural north China
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350:. Tianjin: Tianjin renmin me\\ishu chubanshe. p. 519.
375:. Tianjin: Tianjin renmin meishu chubanshe. p. 519.
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403:. Beijing: Xinzhi sanlian shudian. p. 293.
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35:Period (1661-1722).
263:3. Baby and beauty
187:woodblock printing
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16:(Redirected from
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475:. Retrieved
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454:. Retrieved
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401:潍坊木板年画:传承与创新
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330:. Retrieved
326:the original
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48:Qing dynasty
830:Printmaking
767:Golden Week
677:Turnip cake
581:Firecracker
174:Yangliuqing
134:Kitchen God
128:during the
814:Categories
687:Melon seed
657:Lotus seed
551:Lion dance
477:2010-01-26
471:"中國民間年畫簡述"
456:2010-01-26
450:"中國民間年畫簡述"
332:2013-04-11
309:References
199:WangFang (
120:Background
672:Taro cake
576:Fireworks
126:door gods
637:Fat choy
607:Nian gao
541:Dashuhua
288:Surimono
282:See also
792:Society
778:Portals
749:Related
725:Chunyun
682:Yusheng
642:Yau gok
373:中国年画发展史
348:中国年画发展史
195:Weifang
180:History
101:níanhùa
83:Chinese
18:Nianhua
647:Kralan
632:Fa gao
622:Bakkwa
617:Jiaozi
534:Topics
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407:
379:
354:
238:Themes
164:, the
160:, the
106:Banhua
98::
96:pinyin
85::
33:Kangxi
804:China
706:Other
667:Squab
697:Fish
652:Kuih
600:Food
546:Nian
430:ISBN
405:ISBN
377:ISBN
352:ISBN
153:).
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591:Fu
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77:A
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335:.
151:新
148:迎
145:旧
142:辞
91:画
88:年
81:(
20:)
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