Landscape
Artist
Wang Yuanqi
(Chinese, 1642–1715)
Date1713-14
MediumHanging scroll: ink and slight color on paper
DimensionsImage: 33 1/2 x 16 1/2 inches (85.1 x 41.9 cm)
PeriodQing dynasty
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineGift of Professor Ray J. Wu
Terms
- Paintings
- Landscape
- Hanging scroll
- Ink and slight color
- Boats
- Bodies of water
- Bridges
- Houses
- Landscapes
- Mountains
- Temples
- Paper
- Chinese
Object number83.121.001
Label CopyWang Yuanqi was the youngest of the so-called Four Wangs, a group of literati artists that included his grandfather Wang Shimin (1592–1680), along with Wang Jian (1598–1677), and Wang Hui (1632–1717). Followers of the orthodox theories of the late Ming dynasty master Dong Qichang (1555-1636), these artists gained renown for their masterful, yet conservative, landscape paintings.
This landscape painting was painted in the style of Mi Fu, a Chinese painter, poet, and calligrapher of the Northern Song dynasty, who gained renown for his style of painting misty landscapes. The “Mi Fu” style involved the use of large wet dots of ink applied with a flat brush. This painting demonstrates the classic orthodox trend during the mid-Qing period, wherein artists deliberately recall the works of past masters to show their understanding of and reverence for tradition. ("Tradition, Transmission, and Transformation in East Asian Art," curated by Cornell PhD student Yuhua Ding under the supervision of Ellen Avril and presented at the Johnson Museum January 23-June 12, 2016)
Collections
Follower of Lu Huancheng
Qin Zuyong
Qing dynasty, second half of 19th century
Kano Tsunenobu
Kano Tsunenobu
Wang Hui