Masterpieces of Chinese Painting

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Masterpieces of Chinese Painting 700-1900 Teachers Resource: Image Bank Supported by Friends of the V&A Travel Partner Viking River Cruises Restaurant Partner Ping Pong

INTRODUCTION Masterpieces of Chinese Painting 700 1900 is the first international exhibition in the UK since 1935 to bring together some of the finest examples of Chinese painting created in successive periods from the beginning of the 8th to the end of the 19th century. The works come from major public collections in America, Britain, China, France, Germany, Sweden and Japan. The exhibition explores the recurrent characteristics of Chinese painting as well as its innovation throughout history. By highlighting the aesthetic quality and expressive power of the individual works, it seeks to open viewers minds to one of the world s great artistic traditions. The exhibition is organised chronologically and thematically into six main sections. It also includes a display that explains painting techniques and studio practices. Cover image: Mi Youren (1074/86 1151/65), Cloudy Mountains (detail), 1140 50, ink on paper, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Museum no. 1973.121.1) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/ Scala, Florence

Objects of Devotion 700-950

OBJECTS OF DEVOTION The exhibition will begin by exploring paintings made for temples during the Tang (618 907) and Five Dynasties (907 960) periods. The majority of images from this period were made for Buddhist liturgies or as votive offerings. Most surviving pictures from this early period are Buddhist banners and screens, painted on silk and characterised by their bright colours. These are predominantly drawn from Dunhuang, a remote region in the North West which was far from Tang dynastic control during the period of Buddhist persecution in the mid 9th century. Not all the paintings in this section are Buddhist; the long illustrated manuscript The Five Planets and Twenty-Eight Constellations is a secular handscroll which is the earliest surviving painting of astronomy.

The Quest for Reality 950-1250

THE QUEST FOR REALITY Section two looks at the growing artistic enthusiasm for the visible world and the rise of landscape painting. Here we find mountain and river scenes, depictions of flowers and animals, studies of fishermen and travellers, and pictures exploring the cycle of the seasons, changing weather and the shifting qualities of natural light. Many works were by court painters and made for the interiors of official buildings and imperial palaces. These paintings present new and compelling images of the real world. This section will also explore the shift from a preference for bright colours to a more monochrome aesthetic, as seen both in monumental landscape paintings and in small-scale vignettes featuring animals and human figures. Preference for the monochromatic did not completely preclude the use of colour, however, and we see how during the second part of this period, Emperor Huizong played a key role in maintaining the interest in polychromy and in developing a distinctive painterly lyricism.

Mi Youren (1074/86 1151/65), Cloudy Mountains, 1140 50, ink on paper, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Museum no. 1973.121.1) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence

Ma Yuan (active 1175 1225), Bare Willows and Distant Mountains, About 1175 1200, Ink and colour on silk, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Museum no. 14.61) Photograph 2013 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Possibly Emperor Huizong (1082 1135), Court Ladies Preparing Newly Woven Silk, About 1101 26, ink, colour and gold on silk, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Museum no. 12.886) Photograph 2013 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Probably Emperor Huizong (1082 1135), Auspicious Cranes, 1112, ink and colour on silk, Liaoning Provincial Museum (Museum no. zong 4848; shu 150) The Liaoning Provincial Museum Collection

Just as the sky grows light, rainbow-hued clouds brush the roof ridge. Immortal birds, proclaiming good news, suddenly appear with their measured dance. Soaring windborne, truly companions of the isles of immortality, Two by two, they show their noble forms. From the poem inscribed on Auspicious Cranes Probably Emperor Huizong (1082 1135), Auspicious Cranes (detail), 1112, Ink and colour on silk, Liaoning Provincial Museum (Museum no. zong 4848; shu 150) The Liaoning Provincial Museum Collection

Chen Rong (about 1189 1268), Nine Dragons (detail), 1244, ink and touches of red on paper Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Museum no. 17.1697) Photograph 2013 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Probably Mao Song (active 1127 50), Monkey, About 1127 50, Ink, colour and gold on silk, Tokyo National Museum, Japan (Museum no. TA-297) Image TNM Image Archives

Embracing Solitude 1250-1400

EMBRACING SOLITUDE While court patronage continued despite the disruption caused by the Song-Yuan dynastic change of the late 13 th century, the most striking innovations of this period took place at the hands of monks and scholars. These new groups of artists did not depend on commissions for palaces and official buildings for their livelihood. Their paintings were made for private use, often as personal gifts, and were displayed in the houses of their owners. Even works with religious subject matter painted by these artists were not intended for public display. The subject matter used by monk and scholar painters was very selective and often had literary, philosophical and personal associations. The interest in representing external reality was replaced by a concern for exploring inner thoughts and emotions. This in turn gave rise to powerfully expressive styles of brushwork and an austere approach to the use of colour. Black ink on white paper was regarded as the most appropriate vehicle of expression.

Anonymous, Bodhidharma Crossing the Yangzi on a Reed, Before 1363, ink on paper, The Cleveland Museum of Art (Museum no. 1964.44) The Cleveland Museum of Art

Traditionally attributed to Shi Ke (active 934 65), Two Chan Patriarchs Harmonising Their Minds (from a diptych), 1200 1300, Ink on paper, Tokyo National Museum, Japan (Museum no. TA 162) Image TNM Image Archives

Ni Zan (1306 74), Woods and Valleys of Mount Yu, 1372 Ink on paper The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Museum no. 1973.120.8) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence

Wang Mian (1287 1359) Fragrant Snow at Broken Bridge About 1310 59 Ink on silk The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Museum no. 1973.121.9) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence

Chilly plum blossoms fill branches of white jade; Scattered by a warm breeze, [petals] flutter like snowflakes. The Recluse of Solitary Hill remains true to himself, But who carries the song of reed pipes across Broken Bridge? Poem inscribed on Fragrant Snow at Broken Bridge Wang Mian (1287 1359), Fragrant Snow at Broken Bridge (detail), About 1310 59, Ink on silk, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, (Museum no. 1973.121.9) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence

Zhao Mengfu (1254 1322), Groom and Horse (detail of a handscroll), 1296, Ink and colour on paper, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, (Museum no. 1988.135) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/Scala, Florence

The Pursuit of Happiness 1400-1600

THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS An artistic explosion took place in the 15 th and 16 th centuries. As well as in Beijing in the north, major cities in the lower Yangzi River region such as Hangzhou, Nanjing and Suzhou became important new centres for painting. The political stability and economic prosperity of the Ming dynasty stimulated demand from all levels of society for paintings that would delight the eye and the heart. Painting on silk resumed its former popularity, expensive pigments reappeared on artists palettes, and images became increasingly decorative. Subject matter ranged from romantic characters or episodes in history and literature, through to topographical views of famous sites and gardens, rare animals and plants. Many pictures were made for seasonal festivals or other auspicious occasions.

Du Jin (active about 1465 1509), Court Ladies in the Inner Palace (detail), About 1465 1509, ink and colour on paper, Shanghai Museum (Museum no. 31919) Shanghai Museum

Possibly Qiu Ying (1494/5 1552), Saying Farewell at Xunyang (detail), About 1500 52, ink and colour on paper, The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City (Museum no. 46-50). Photo: John Lamberton

Anonymous Portrait of Shen Zhou at Age Eighty 1506 Ink and colour on silk The Palace Museum (Museum no. xin 16641) The Palace Museum Collection

Tang Yin (1470 1523), Pure Dream beneath a Paulownia Tree, 1500 23, Ink and light colour on paper, The Palace Museum (Museum no. xin 101314) The Palace Museum Collection

The paulownia shadows cover the purple moss. The gentleman is in a deep sleep. For this lifetime, he has no chance of rank and fame. This pure sleep is no longer filled with the dreams of grandeur. From the poem inscribed on Pure Dream beneath a Paulownia Tree Tang Yin (1470 1523), Pure Dream beneath a Paulownia Tree (detail), 1500 23, Ink and light colour on paper The Palace Museum The Palace Museum Collection

Zhou Chen (about 1450 1535), Dwelling by the Stream in Spring, 1475, Ink and colour on paper, The Palace Museum (Museum no. xin 47084) The Palace Museum Collection

Challenging the Past 1600-1900

CHALLENGING THE PAST The second half of the 16 th and the 17 th century was an age of great artistic rivalry, especially in the fields of landscape painting and the depiction of animals and plants. Painters competed directly not only with their contemporaries, but with their predecessors as well. The most competitive of them entered into a life-long duel with the great masters of the past. Different strategies were adopted to achieve individual ambitions. Some painters were passionate students of the grand tradition of Chinese painting and were obsessed with a sense of mission as heirs to that heritage. Others took up the great subjects of the past, turning them into something entirely their own. In doing this they sought to prove they were as good as, if not better, than the old masters they so admired.

Dong Qichang (1555 1636), Twin Marvels of Calligraphy and Painting (details), painting: 1617, calligraphy: 1619, ink on paper, Liaoning Provincial Museum (Museum no. zong 4840; shu 142) The Liaoning Provincial Museum Collection

Wang Hui (1632 1717), The Colours of Mount Taihang (detail), 1669, Ink and colour on silk, The Metropolitan Museum of Art (Museum no. 1978.423) 2013. Image copyright The Metropolitan Museum of Art/Art Resource/ Scala, Florence

Bada Shanren (1626 1705), Flowers on the River (detail), 1697, Ink on paper, Tianjin Museum (Museum no. 58.5.372) Courtesy Tianjin Museum

The 108 rosary beads Can be made of great diamonds, Or little jade stones, But how can they compare with, in my picture, A single lotus seed that is visible but does not exist? Alas! The entire world is within my lotus. From the poem inscribed on Flowers on the River Bada Shanren (1626 1705), Flowers on the River (detail), 1697, Ink on paper, Tianjin Museum (Museum no. 58.5.372) Courtesy Tianjin Museum

Looking to the West 1600-1900

LOOKING TO THE WEST The European painting tradition was introduced to China in the late 16 th century. During the 18 th and 19 th centuries, when the country was ruled by the Qing, it became an increasingly significant artistic force. Chinese court painters interacted directly with European missionary-artists, from whom they avidly learnt the laws of linear perspective and chiaroscuro. These techniques, modified to suit the Chinese aesthetic, were adopted to create the illusion of depth and light. Fascination with European painting was not confined to the Imperial Court. In the new artistic centres of the south, Chinese painters looked to newly imported European prints and illustrated books, which inspired methods of painting and the incorporation of subject matter unknown to their predecessors.

Zeng Jing (1564 1647), Portrait of Wang Shimin, 1616 Ink and colour on silk Tianjin Museum (Museum no. 65.5.3741) Courtesy Tianjin Museum

Ren Yi (1840 95), Portrait of Gao Yongzhi, 1887, Ink and light colour on paper, The Palace Museum, Beijing (Museum no. xin 100465) The Palace Museum Collection

Xu Yang (1712 about 79), Prosperous Suzhou (detail), 1759, ink and colour on silk, Liaoning Provincial Museum (Museum no. zong 4938; shu 240) The Liaoning Provincial Museum Collection