Rubbing the right way
Updated: 2016-03-05 11:57
By Huo Yan(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Wang Jisheng practice the ancient stone rubbing art in Guilin, Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region. [Photo by huo Yan / China Daily] |
What is stone rubbing?
Stone rubbing refers to an ancient art of printing stone inscriptions on Chinese art papers with Chinese ink, or other organic pigments.
The artist brushes the clean stone surface with sticky liquid obtained from boiling bletilla, a kind of plant with tuber stems rich in starch, sticks the paper on the surface evenly, and then gently taps the paper with a soft mane brush, so as to make sure that the paper over the intaglio sinks into the inscriptions and the rest of the paper tightly clings to the stone surface.
When the paper is half dry, in each hand take a small cloth bag, which contains cotton soaked with Chinese ink, and tap every part of the paper lightly three times. The part of the paper that has sunk into the intaglio will remain white, and the rest of the paper turns black. Remove the paper from the stone and dry it in shade. You can then see the stone inscriptions copied onto the paper.
- Boao airport all set for upcoming Asian forum
- Snapshots from the 'two sessions'
- Turn of virtual reality cameras at two sessions
- China's home-made expedition mothership 'Zhang Qian' to be launched in March
- Top 10 countries boosting China's tourist inflows
- Airplane restaurant to open in Wuhan
- World premiums at Geneva Motor Show
- China's top 10 tech startups
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Maps show first meeting of East, West |
Spring festival show hits Toronto |
Building education superhighway for youth |
Rep. Mike Honda: serving public from the heart |
China's economy: slowdown clouds reality |
Florida enticing Chinese tourists |
Today's Top News
What ends Jeb Bush's White House hopes
Investigation for Nicolas's campaign
Will US-ASEAN meeting be good for region?
Accentuate the positive in Sino-US relations
Dangerous games on peninsula will have no winner
National Art Museum showing 400 puppets in new exhibition
Finest Chinese porcelains expected to fetch over $28 million
Monkey portraits by Chinese ink painting masters
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |