| nei hua (内画)  
			Chinese. 
			‘Inside painting’, ‘inner 
			drawing’ or ‘inner painting’. Name for a kind of 
			traditional Chinese art in which 
			 
			illustrations and often 
          
      		
      	Chinese calligraphy
			are
			 
			hand-painted on the inside surface of a glass or crystal object (fig.), 
			such as a vase (fig.), 
			a flask or a sphere. The painting must be 
			produced in reverse fashion by manipulating a specialized 
		      
		      
              
		      bamboo 
			 
			pen through an opening in the object, such as the neck of a flask, 
			which is held upside-down. It requires both skill and patience, and 
			each finished object is unique. Most paintings feature characters 
			from Chinese folklore, religion and mythology, as well as 
			Chinese landscapes (fig.) 
			and animals, though also abstract forms are sometimes used. The art 
			is today most commonly practiced on
			
			snuff bottles (fig.), 
			small crystal 
    		flasks, that are usually flat in shape and that were formerly used 
			in 
		      
		      
		      China 
			to hold powdered tobacco. These painted snuff bottles are referred 
			to as nei hua hu (内画壶), 
			and are still produced today as replicas and souvenirs. 
			
			
			Whereas the outside of the object is polished, 
			the inside is made rough, in order to allow for it to be painted on. 
			This is done by inserting a coarse metal ball and shaking the object 
			until the sides are rutted enough. 
			
			
			
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