A Pure and Remote View:
Visualizing Early Chinese Landscape Painting
Lecture 6
Five Dynasties Painting: The Great Landscape Masters
In this same period, five great masters of landscape--Jing Hao, Guan Tong, Dong Yuan, Juran, and Li Cheng--brought to this art a new profundity of conception and diversity of styles. Although no surviving work can be firmly accepted as by any one of them, major paintings of high quality and importance are attributed to them. Close visual analysis of image enlargements in this 1 hour 41 minute lecture lead to new theories and concepts of how landscape imagery was used to convey profound human meaning.
Study guides for each lecture will be available soon, and all materials will be freely downloadable for use by anyone without charge; this is a completely non-profit project.
Professor Cahill wishes to thank many teachers and colleagues, and the many museums, universities--most of all University of California at Berkeley--and other institutions that have supported him over the decades of his career. The Institute of East Asian Studies at Berkeley has broken new ground in the field of education by taking on research support, the financial administration of this project, and the multimedia publication and global distribution of these lectures as part of their program. Special thanks in particular are due to the Tang Research Foundation and its founder, for encouraging Professor Cahill to undertake this series and for providing initial financial support for it.
Please contact Managing Editor of Publications Kate Chouta at the University of California at Berkeley’s Institute of East Asian Studies, Professor James Cahill, or Chatterbox Productions to find out how to obtain High Definition (1920 by 1080 pixel) versions of these lectures on Blu-Ray Disks or in any other electronic video file format of use to you or your institution. All materials are being released at cost and under Creative Commons licenses. They are intended in no way for any commercial purpose, nor to represent or take the place of a university course in the subject. All intellectual property exhibited in these lectures belongs to Professor James Cahill or falls under the US legal principle of Fair Use for non-commercial educational purposes only. Please see this page for additional details regarding your legal rights and duties vis-a-vis materials on this site.

