Use of pigments, wood, natural materials, etc on paper, silk, cloth etc., has been used in many countries all over the world for centuries (edit: sorry thousands in the case of China where many mineral pigments originate). When taking things into a global perspective, the term becomes outdated and western+japan centric. While that is okay in Japanese art culture, it ignores other countries' cultures if talked about outside japan. Edit: one of the reasons for this being a problem is that when some artists use this medium or techniques and call it "nihonga" often people criticize them if they're not Japanese.
Beautiful, thank you :) I do oil painting and quache/watercolor, but I would really love to learn these traditional Japanese materials and pigments..
Ur video's so peaceful 😍😍 love them lot
Muchas gracias por compartir su conocimiento
😀
I always like this style , but didn't know it has a name , thx 😊
Very interesting
i would like to learn it :)
very impressive :)
I always wanted to learn but everything has usually been in japanese or very obscure..
Use of pigments, wood, natural materials, etc on paper, silk, cloth etc., has been used in many countries all over the world for centuries (edit: sorry thousands in the case of China where many mineral pigments originate). When taking things into a global perspective, the term becomes outdated and western+japan centric. While that is okay in Japanese art culture, it ignores other countries' cultures if talked about outside japan.
Edit: one of the reasons for this being a problem is that when some artists use this medium or techniques and call it "nihonga" often people criticize them if they're not Japanese.
@@itsgonnabeanaurfrommeThis view is very pointed. Thanks for your thoughtfulness in depth.
👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼😻😻😻😻😻