Chungongtu (春宮圖, lit. spring palace illustration or spring palace picture), also known as chungonghua (春宮畵) or chungongmihua (春宮密畵) is a generic term for the traditional erotic art in China.[1][2][3][4][5][6]
^"Court-Ladies-of-the-Former-Shu-State". Shanghai Daily. 29 April 2016.
^Yoshitoshi's Women: The Woodblock-print Series Fūzoku Sanjūnisō,1995, John Stevenson. The book mentions the tradition as Chungonghua, or spring palace pictures.
^The humor and technology of sex, 1970, Paul Tabori, page 302. Mentions the tradition as "spring palace pictures" started some time from the Song dynasty.
^Shunga:Ten Questions and Answers,2013, page 13, by Monta Hayakawa mentions the tradition as "Chungongmihua"
^Walley, Arthur (1929). Magical use of phallic representations its late survival in china and japan.
^Chinese American Understanding: A Sixty-year Search page 237 in year 1981 mentions the tradition as "Chun Kung".
Chungongtu (春宮圖, lit. spring palace illustration or spring palace picture), also known as chungonghua (春宮畵) or chungongmihua (春宮密畵) is a generic term for...
subjects. However, compared to the traditions of Shunga of Japan and Chungongtu of China, it did not become as mainstream due to the country's strong...
of many Japanese citizens. Similarly, the erotic art of China(known as Chungongtu) reached its popular peak during the latter part of the Ming dynasty....
except arts created for sex education or medical consultations, such as chungongtu. In pre-Columbian art it is also practically nonexistent, despite the...