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Tea Drinking Under the Wutong Tree

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paper (fiber product)332 × 23 Cm

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About the artwork
Artist supplied description.

Generations of Chinese intellectuals and Buddhist monks honed the practice of tea tasting into a high art form. The "bamboo stove" —a carrying case that contained a ceramic kettle used for heating water—was central to the process of tea preparation. This ingenious device, fanned by a servant in the center of this painting, was the subject of a poem by Wu Kuan (1435-1504), a close friend of Tang Yin. In this composition, Wu appears on a low platform with a teapot and a scroll by his side. He shared the tea ceremony with a Buddhist monk, while another servant draws fresh water from a nearby stream.

Five years after Wu Kuan's death, Tang Yin executed this delicate vignette in the writer's memory. The first colophon was written by Zhu Yunming (1461-1527), a famous poet and calligrapher who exchanged tea-related verses with Mr. Wu. Such commemorative paintings provide poignant records of Chinese intellectual and cultured society.

Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
Mediumpaper (fiber product)
Dimensions332 × 23 Cm
CertificateCertificate not provided
Timeline
Chain of custody, exhibitions, and verification milestones synced from the provenance service.
Thu
29
Jan
note

Tonying & Company, New York.

Tonying & Company, New York.
Thu
29
Jan
note

High Tea, Glorious Manifestations, East and west, by Laurie E. Barnes and Anne Bissonnette, Norton Museum of Art, page 134, C27

High Tea, Glorious Manifestations, East and west, by Laurie E. Barnes and Anne Bissonnette, Norton Museum of Art, page 134, C27
Thu
29
Jan
exhibition

Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, Florida, February 19 – May 24, 2015.

Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, Florida, February 19 – May 24, 2015.
Thu
29
Jan
exhibition

Detroit Institute of Arts, The Arts of the Ming Dynasty, 1952

Detroit Institute of Arts, The Arts of the Ming Dynasty, 1952
Thu
29
Jan
note

Paul L. Grigaut, E.P. Richardson, The Arts of the Ming Dynasty

Paul L. Grigaut, E.P. Richardson, The Arts of the Ming Dynasty (The Detroit Institute of Arts, 1952), No. 25, p. 12.
Thu
29
Jan
note

Pang Yuanji (c....

Pang Yuanji (c. 1864-1949), Shanghai
Thu
29
Jan
note

Charles Fabens Kelley, “A Chinese Painting of the Ming Dynasty,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago, March, 1942.

Charles Fabens Kelley, “A Chinese Painting of the Ming Dynasty,” Bulletin of the Art Institute of Chicago, March, 1942.
Thu
29
Jan
note

Pang Yuanji, Xuzhai minghua lu

Pang Yuanji, Xuzhai minghua lu (1909), ch.4:5b-8b.
Tue
29
Jan
note

Anne De Coursey Clapp, The Painting of Tang Yin

Anne De Coursey Clapp, The Painting of Tang Yin (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991), fig. 22, pl. 2, pp. 55, 88-93.
Fri
29
Jan
note

Comprehensive Illustrated Catalog of Chinese Paintings: Vol. 1 American and Canadian Collections, compiled by Kei Suzuki , by University of Tokyo Press, 1982; page34,35, No. A 3–013.

Comprehensive Illustrated Catalog of Chinese Paintings: Vol. 1 American and Canadian Collections, compiled by Kei Suzuki , by University of Tokyo Press, 1982; page34,35, No. A 3–013.
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