Interpretation of ancient painting poems

Painting ancient poems is explained as follows:

1, the ancient poem "painting" means that you can see the green mountains in the distance, but you can't hear the sound of running water nearby. Spring has passed, the flowers are still unbeaten, people are approaching, but the birds on the branches are still motionless.

2. Painting is a five-character quatrain written by Tang Dynasty poet Wang Wei. This is a painting appreciation poem. Judging from the description in the poem, the mountains, water and flowers and birds in the painting are typical Chinese painting themes, and they must be quite realistic and vivid.

Through the description of the text, the author turned a still life painting into a beautiful landscape picture: green mountains and green waters, flowers blooming, birds singing and flowers fragrant, a vibrant scene, which attracted readers' infinite imagination. When we return to reality from reverie, we find that everything in the painting is just a lifeless still life.

Extension:

Hua (Pinyin: huà) is a common and standardized Chinese character. This word was first seen in Oracle Bone Inscriptions in Shang Dynasty. The upper part of the ancient glyph means handwriting, and the lower part is the lines of strokes. The original meaning of painting is to draw characters with strokes, and the original meaning is to draw boundaries. A figure drawn with a finger sticking out with a pen-and-ink drawing, used as a noun.

A stroke of Chinese characters is called "painting", which also comes from description. Dividing boundaries means design and planning, so "painting" also means planning and drawing. Broadly speaking, an action with hands, feet or utensils is also called "painting".

The meaning of painting should be the original meaning, that is, using tools such as pens to describe colors, people and verbs. This meaning is also commonly used in modern Chinese, such as "painting landscapes, portraits, tigers and dogs, making the finishing point, gilding the lily, and painting cakes to satisfy hunger".

Drawing lines or marks with strokes is called "painting", so writing is also called "painting". The horizontal line of ancient hexagrams is called "painting", the horizontal stroke in calligraphy is called "painting", and the stroke of Chinese characters is called "painting". Even wrinkles can be called "paintings". Two kisses painted on Ling Shujing's family of Yin and Yang means that there are many wrinkles on both sides of the lips.

Broadly speaking, making some actions with hands, feet or utensils, such as "drawing a belly", "pointing to the sky", "pointing to the feet" and "drawing a cross on the chest", is also called "painting". When playing arpeggio, the hand sweeps the strings, which is also called "painting". There is such a poem in Tang Bai Juyi's arpeggio: "Before she put down the piano, she ended with a wave of her hand, and the four strings sang together, like a silk splitting."