Field waterwheels are not works of art.
Art works refer to paintings, calligraphy, sculptures and other two-dimensional or three-dimensional plastic art works composed of lines, colors or other methods. The waterwheel is not a work of art, it is a water irrigation tool.
Art works, including pure art works and applied art works. Among them, pure art works refer to independent works of art that can only be viewed by people, such as oil paintings, Chinese paintings, prints, watercolors, etc. Applied art works refer to the combination of the content of art works and objects with use value. The objects have both ornamental value and practical value with the help of art works, such as ceramic art, etc.
The work "Rain on the Back of a Cow in Red" created by the master of traditional Chinese painting Qi Baishi in 1952, depicts a shepherd boy wearing a red waistcoat, lying on the back of a cow and flying a kite. The strong buffalo and the thin strings of the kite complement each other, showing the happy childhood of the little shepherd boy. The calm and long kite string shows the author's profound writing skills.
Jiang Zhaohe, who is also a master of traditional Chinese painting, has a very different painting style. His "Telling the Study Results to the Volunteers" created in 1953 depicts two girls in a realistic brushwork. Among them, the sister wearing a red scarf is giving "the cutest child" Uncle Volunteer" wrote. The rigorous shapes and vivid expressions freeze the subject characters in that special time and space, making the painting meaningful.
Wu Fan's print "Dandelion", created in 1959, is deeply memorable with its vivid and classic image of children. The painting, which has spanned more than half a century, remains timeless.
On the occasion of Children's Day, classic cartoons such as "Black Cat Sheriff", "Nezha Haohai" and "Baolian Lantern" can always evoke the "memories" of those born in the 80s and 90s.
Among them, "Where the Sea" was released in 1979, with its strong Chinese elements, has become a classic in the hearts of generations. The film's chief art designer was Zhang Ding.
As a famous artist, Zhang Ding devoted himself to the revolution with his Anti-Japanese War cartoons in his early years. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, he participated in the design of the national emblem and the country's first set of commemorative stamps. In his later years, he focused on burnt-ink landscape paintings with a vast artistic conception, and was well-known in the industry. Famous.