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Chinese New Year, or Spring
Festival, is the longest and most important holiday for Chinese people. It
is usually celebrated from the eighth day of the twelfth month to the fifteenth
of the first month (lantern
festival), by Chinese
lunar calendar. Traditionally, from the 23rd to the 27th of the twelfth
lunar month, every family cleans and paints their houses and does New Year
shopping. In rural China, hanging New Year paintings is a must. Bought from the
market, New
Year pictures are hanged on every important spots of the house-the gete,
rooms, the kitchen, the storehouse, the well, and the stable. Portraits of
village god and kitchen got are usually pasted up on niched to express people's
wishes for peace and happiness. For average Chinese farmers, hanging New Year
paintings bring about unusual festive joy and delight to them.
Many provinces in China are known for their distinctive New Year paintings,
from northern Hebei, Shangdong, Henan and Tianjin ,
to southern Shandong, Henan and Tianjin, to southern Guangdong and Fujian, from
eastern Jiangsu to western Shaanxi and Sichuan. Among them, the painting genre
from Wuqiang County, Hebei Province enjoys a long history, diversified styles and
widespread reputation.
Woodprint New Year painting from Wuqiang is noted as one
of China's seven major New Year painting genres. The other six are from Taohuawu
of Jiangsu, Yangliuqing
of Tianjin, Mianzhu of Sichuan, Yangjiabu of Shandong, Zhuxianzhen of Henan and
Foshan
of Guangdong.
First appearing in the Han
Dynasty (206 BC-220 AD), Chinese New Year painting became widespread during
the Tang (618-907 AD) and Song (960-1127) and enjoyed its heydays during the
Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911). Wuqiang New Year painting emerged 500
years ago. Folk artists first painted each picture and later block print was
applied to the creation. During the period from 1662 to 1820, Wuqiang was one of
the largest sources of woodprint New Year painting in the north. There were 144
shops in the town dealing with New Year painting and thousands of farmers in the
surrounding 40 villages painting in their workshops. The largest four shops even
set up some 160 outlets across the country, selling paintings to a dozen of
provinces. The largest annual output of Wuqiang paintings reached some 100
million pieces, accounting for one third of the country's total.
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