释义 |
Nanga|ˈnæŋgə| [Jap., abbrev. Nanshuga, f. nanshu southern China + ga painting, picture.] Used, chiefly attrib., to designate an intellectual style of Japanese painting.
1958M. L. Wolf Dict. Painting 188 Nanga School, in Japanese art, a style of painting depicting genre subjects in a manner of Chinese idealism. 1970J. W. Hall Japan from Prehist. to Mod. Times x. 217 The property of the samurai class was the style of ‘literati’ painting (bunjinga or nanga). 1970Oxf. Compan. Art 762/1 Nanga School, school of painting which arose in Japan at the end of the 17th c.,..and persisted until late in the 19th. Ibid. 762/2 The Nanga painters were not all amateurs, but they spurned the professional schools of their day... In general their work represented the art of the intelligentsia as opposed to Ukiyo-e, which was that of the people. 1970Ashmolean Mus. Rep. Visitors 1969 43 a particularly desirable acquisition in connection with the Museum's collection of Nanga painting. 1972Times 18 May 21/6 Ikeno Taiga's Taigado Gafu..made {pstlg}400. This is one of the finest colour-printed Nanga books and extremely rare. It is dated 1803. |