Skip to main content

Frolicking Fish

Artist (Chinese, 1894–1983)
Date1969
MediumHanging scroll: ink on paper
DimensionsWidth: 17 inches (43.2 cm)
ClassificationsPaintings
Credit LineGift of Benjamin Chou and Christina L. Fang
Terms
  • Paintings
  • Hanging scroll: ink
  • Paper
  • Chinese
Object number2005.085.002
Label CopyFrolicking Fish represents Wang Yachen’s typical late style, developed after he moved to the United States in 1948. Wang’s artistic career can be divided into three main phases: learning and practicing Western-style painting before 1930; combining Chinese and Western painting between 1930 and 1948; and returning to a traditional style after 1948. Wang Yachen played a significant role in art circles during the first half of the twentieth century. Both his art and his numerous writings explored the differences and similarities between Chinese and Western painting. His effort at combining these styles exemplifies the collective undercurrent among his generation of Chinese intellectuals to promote awareness of and support for modernizing Chinese society. ("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
A group of small fish
Wang Yachen
1968
Lotus he hua
Wang Yachen
1930
Bamboo mo zhu
Wang Yachen
1930
Landscape
Wang Yuanqi
1713-14
Landscape
Wang Yuanqi
1679
Landscape
Wang Shimin
Ming dynasty (1368-1644)
Landscape
Wang Jian
Qing dynasty, 1671
Landscape
Wang Hui
Still Life with Flowers
Wang Wu
Qing dynasty, 1650