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Landscape

Artist (Chinese, 1896–1994)
Date1927
MediumHanging scroll: ink on paper
Dimensions37 1/4 × 17 1/2 inches (94.6 × 44.5 cm)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineGift of Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Baekeland
Terms
  • Paintings
  • Landscape
  • Scroll
  • Hanging scroll: ink
  • Bamboo groves
  • Bodies of water
  • Dwellings
  • Houses
  • Inscriptions
  • Landscapes
  • Men
  • Mountains
  • Rock
  • Rooftops
  • Trees
  • Vernacular architecture
  • Paper
  • Chinese
Object number2000.136.003
Label CopyLiu Haisu was a founder of the Shanghai Art College and a pioneering practitioner in the field of modern art during the early twentieth century. Most of his existing early works are oil paintings that explore postimpressionistic styles, a pursuit common among young Chinese painters in Shanghai during the 1920s and ’30s. The Johnson Museum’s painting is one of the few remaining examples of Liu’s early ink paintings. In the background the mountains are painted using a mogu technique in which forms are made by ink washes rather than by outlines. In the foreground two or three withered trees with bare branches solemnly stand alone, while in the middle ground there is a figure in profile rendered with spontaneous and simplified brushstrokes. The pictorial language illustrates Liu’s early efforts at combining Chinese and Western styles in his practice, in particular the emphasis on expressiveness rather than representativeness. In addition, a long inscription written by Liu with bold and loose brushstrokes shows a calligraphic style influenced by his teacher Kang Youwei (1858–1927), whose calligraphy is also on view in this exhibition. The inscription tells us that the painting was requested by a friend of Liu, who looked after him during his short stay in a hospital in the spring of 1927. The event was not recorded in Liu’s personal chronicle published in 1992, so the painting provides us with a greater understanding of this particular year of Liu’s life. ("Debating Art: Chinese Intellectuals at the Crossroads," curated by Yuhua Ding, with assistance by Elizabeth Emrich, and presented at the Johnson Museum February 2-July 8, 2018)
Collections
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Follower of Lu Huancheng
Mei-shih-an
Gu Yun
1883
Flying Sails
Pan Tianshou
1963
Album of landscapes
Dong Bangda
18th century
View of Mount Kumgang
Choson dynasty (1392-1910); Joseon dynasty (1392-1910); 19th century
Lotus
Gao Qipei
17th century
Picking Prunus
Xie Zhiguang
20th century
Cloud Capital Peak in the Yellow Mountains
Attributed to Mei Qing
17th century