
Gong Bi has a lot of meaning. In the word Gong Bi, Gong takes the sense of "meticulous", "delicate". Bi generally indicates the tools for writing, but it has also the meaning of "to write". By there we already guess the style of painting corresponding in this term. The technique Gong Bi seeks the delicacy, the precision of the details. It needs a good technique and a lot of patience.
The Gong Bi is practised on not absorbing paper or silk.
For contours we use a brush Lang Hao. We must distinguish mainly four types of brushes Lang Hao:
But I highly advise to use a small brush Xiao Bai Gui. Master Wang Shuhui, famous for the delicacy of her lines, used only one brush Xiao Bai Gui to trace all the types of contours.
Two brushes Yang Hao are then necessary: one to apply the colours inside contours, the other, soaked with water, to moderate and degrade the colours.
According to surface to be coloured, we use three sizes of brush:
Those three brushes all belong to the kind Yang Hao, but they are particular to the application of the colours in Gong Bi style.
The first consists to layout the sketch directly on the sheet which you want to paint with a pencil 2B. Because the rice sheets are very fine and thus fragile, you cannot really gum and trace again without damaging the support. It is thus necessary to succeed on the first blow. Some small corrections while gumming slightly are however possible.
The second method consists in initially tracing the sketch on a usual sheet of paper (Western or Chinese, it does not matter). Then you place this sheet on the paper which you want to paint, the sketch upwards. With the pencil, you trace again on contours in order to leave a print on the sheet under. This one then has slightly printed contours. You can then start to paint it. If printed contours are not sufficiently visible, you can slightly recall them with the pencil 2B. This method is longer, but it makes it possible to not damage the rice paper and also to re-use the draft to remake a similar painting.
Attention should be paid to not make features with the same thickness. The downstroke and upstroke are of very great importance and it sometimes happens to find painters who do not grant much attention to it. Lastly, according to the tonality of colour that you envisage to use for each part, you must pay attention to the density of ink for contours.
Before undertaking each stage, it should be taken care that the colours applied previously are quite dry. First you apply the colour with one brush. Then, with the other brush soaked with water you shade and degrade the colours. For two colours, you first make a shade of a colour as described above. When painting is dry, you make a shade of the other colour on the basis of the other side and going in the opposite direction. The techniques are much diversified and vary according to the subjects.
china-phoenix.net All right reserved
Text and design: Xiaoqian Li-Columeau / English adaptation and programming: Jean Columeau