Crooked Pine

Wu Zhen Chinese

Not on view

Because it retains its greenery even in the dead of winter, the pine symbolizes endurance and fortitude. For Yuan-dynasty scholars living under the alien rule of the Mongols, depictions of ancient pines became a potent metaphor for survival in the face of political discrimination.

Wu Zhen was an educated man who in more settled times would have followed a career in government service. He chose instead to live in reclusion in the mountains of Zhejiang Province. Calling himself the Plum Blossom Daoist (Meihua Daoren), he made a humble living through the practice of divination.

In his inscription, Wu describes the source of his inspiration for this painting:

In winter, the eleventh lunar month of the third year of the
Yuantong reign era [December 1335], while visiting the
Cloudy Grotto, I saw a crooked and twisting ancient tree.
So I wrote this picture to record what I saw. Meihua Daoren
[the Plum Blossom Daoist, Wu Zhen] playing with ink.

Crooked Pine, Wu Zhen (Chinese, 1280–1354), Hanging scroll; ink on silk, China

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