ArtworkStatus unknown

Quiet Life in a Wooded Glen 林麓幽居圖

0 likesNot savedShare from mobile app
paper (fiber product)64 × 177 Cm

Views

0

Likes

0

Saves

Not saved

Shares

0

About the artwork
Artist supplied description.

This modest cottage nestled at the foot of towering mountains presents a quintessential image of academic retreat from the “dusty” world of material concerns and political instabilities. Its cultured occupant kneels on a platform and plays the zither (qin); a book lies open before him and young servants wait attentively nearby. The luxuriant setting of layered peaks and intertwined trees, as well as the dry, charcoal- like treatment of fibrous and dotted boulders, is imbued with a textural richness. This style is closely associated with Wang Meng, the last of the “Four Great Masters” of the Yuan dynasty.

Such a complex, kinetic composition reflects this artist's distinctive contribution to the literati's new use of painting as a vehicle for intellectual and emotional self-expression. This concept was largely kindled by social and political upheavals that accompanied the 14th-century Mongol conquest of China and the establishment of the Yuan dynasty. Wang Meng, who had served the Mongol government as a legal scribe, retired to a mountain hermitage in the turbulent final decades of Yuan rule. He may have executed this painting as a metaphorical self-portrait.

Artwork metadata
Structured fields synced from connected systems.
Mediumpaper (fiber product)
Dimensions64 × 177 Cm
CertificateCertificate not provided
Timeline
Chain of custody, exhibitions, and verification milestones synced from the provenance service.
Thu
05
Feb
note

his address on the invoice is cited as the Hotel Salisbury, 123 W....

his address on the invoice is cited as the Hotel Salisbury, 123 W. 57th Street, New York.
Thu
05
Feb
note

Charles E. Kelley, "A Chinese Landscape of the Yuan Dynasty," The Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly April/May 1948, pp. 44-46.

Charles E. Kelley, "A Chinese Landscape of the Yuan Dynasty," The Art Institute of Chicago Quarterly April/May 1948, pp. 44-46.
Thu
05
Feb
note

Purchased from C....

Purchased from C. C. Wang. November 1947, for $12.000. Wang had not yet moved to the U.S.
Thu
05
Feb
exhibition

The Art Institute of Chicago : Ming (1368-1644) Ching (1644-1921) dynasties Exhibition 1964

The Art Institute of Chicago : Ming (1368-1644) Ching (1644-1921) dynasties Exhibition 1964
Fri
05
Feb
note

Stephen Little, “Chinese Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago,” Arts of Asia, May-June, 1999, Fig. 10.

Stephen Little, “Chinese Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago,” Arts of Asia, May-June, 1999, Fig. 10.
Mon
05
Feb
note

Stephen Little,"Early Chinese Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago," Museum Studies 22:1

Stephen Little,"Early Chinese Paintings in the Art Institute of Chicago," Museum Studies 22:1 (1996), fig. 18.
Fri
05
Feb
note

Comprehensive Illustrated Catalog of Chinese Paintings: Vol. 1 American and Canadian Collections, compiled by Kei Suzuki , by University of Tokyo Press, 1982; page I-30, No. A 3–005.

Comprehensive Illustrated Catalog of Chinese Paintings: Vol. 1 American and Canadian Collections, compiled by Kei Suzuki , by University of Tokyo Press, 1982; page I-30, No. A 3–005.
Wed
05
Feb
note

Jack Sewell, Ming-Ch'ing Dynasties [exh. cat.]

Jack Sewell, Ming-Ch'ing Dynasties [exh. cat.] (AIC,1964), p. (7,8)
© Artist-Unknown. All rights reserved.