Landscape Painting in Chinese Art

Painting was no longer about the description of the visible world; it became a means of conveying the inner landscape of the artist’s heart and mind.
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Cloudy Mountains, Mi Youren  Chinese, Handscroll; ink on paper, China
Mi Youren
before 1200
Shaded Dwellings among Streams and Mountains, Dong Qichang  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink on paper, China
Dong Qichang
ca. 1622–25
Riverbank, Dong Yuan  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink and color on silk, China
Dong Yuan
Landscapes after old masters, Dong Qichang  Chinese, Album of eight leaves; ink on paper, China
Dong Qichang
dated 1630
Cloudy mountains, Fa Ruozhen  Chinese, Hanging scroll, ink and color on silk, China
Fa Ruozhen
1684
Old Trees, Level Distance, Guo Xi  Chinese, Handscroll; ink and color on silk, China
Guo Xi
ca. 1080
Summer Mountains, Qu Ding  Chinese, Handscroll; ink and color on silk, China
Qu Ding
ca. 1050
Scholar viewing a waterfall, Ma Yuan  Chinese, Album leaf; ink and color on silk, China
Ma Yuan
early 13th century
Twin Pines, Level Distance, Zhao Mengfu  Chinese, Handscroll; ink on paper, China
Zhao Mengfu
ca. 1310
Simple Retreat, Wang Meng  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink and color on paper, China
Wang Meng
ca. 1370
Garden of the Inept Administrator, Wen Zhengming  Chinese, Album of eight leaves; ink on paper, China
Wen Zhengming
1551
Wooded Mountains at Dusk, Kuncan  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink and color on paper, China
Kuncan
dated 1666
Eight views of the Yellow Mountains, Zheng Min  Chinese, Album of nine leaves of painting and calligraphy; ink on paper, China
Zheng Min
1681
The Kangxi Emperor's Southern Inspection Tour, Scroll Three: Ji'nan to Mount Tai, Wang Hui and assistants Chinese, Handscroll; ink and color on silk, China
Wang Hui
datable to 1698
Fish and rocks, Bada Shanren (Zhu Da)  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink on paper, China
Bada Shanren (Zhu Da)
dated 1699
"Splashed-color" landscape, Zhang Daqian  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink and color on paper, China
Zhang Daqian
1965

By the late Tang dynasty, landscape painting had evolved into an independent genre that embodied the universal longing of cultivated men to escape their quotidian world to commune with nature. Such images might also convey specific social, philosophical, or political convictions. As the Tang dynasty disintegrated, the concept of withdrawal into the natural world became a major thematic focus of poets and painters. Faced with the failure of the human order, learned men sought permanence within the natural world, retreating into the mountains to find a sanctuary from the chaos of dynastic collapse.

During the early Song dynasty, visions of the natural hierarchy became metaphors for the well-regulated state. At the same time, images of the private retreat proliferated among a new class of scholar-officials. These men extolled the virtues of self-cultivation—often in response to political setbacks or career disappointments—and asserted their identity as literati through poetry, calligraphy, and a new style of painting that employed calligraphic brushwork for self-expressive ends. The monochrome images of old trees, bamboo, rocks, and retirement retreats created by these scholar-artists became emblems of their character and spirit.

Under the Mongol Yuan dynasty, when many educated Chinese were barred from government service, the model of the Song literati retreat evolved into a full-blown alternative culture as this disenfranchised elite transformed their estates into sites for literary gatherings and other cultural pursuits. These gatherings were frequently commemorated in paintings that, rather than presenting a realistic depiction of an actual place, conveyed the shared cultural ideals of a reclusive world through a symbolic shorthand in which a villa might be represented by a humble thatched hut. Because a man’s studio or garden could be viewed as an extension of himself, paintings of such places often served to express the values of their owner.

The Yuan dynasty also witnessed the burgeoning of a second kind of cultivated landscape, the “mind landscape,” which embodied both learned references to the styles of earlier masters and, through calligraphic brushwork, the inner spirit of the artist. Going beyond representation, scholar-artists imbued their paintings with personal feelings. By evoking select antique styles, they could also identify themselves with the values associated with the old masters. Painting was no longer about the description of the visible world; it became a means of conveying the inner landscape of the artist’s heart and mind.

During the Ming dynasty, when native Chinese rule was restored, court artists produced conservative images that revived the Song metaphor for the state as a well-ordered imperial garden, while literati painters pursued self-expressive goals through the stylistic language of Yuan scholar-artists. Shen Zhou (1427–1509), the patriarch of the Wu school of painting centered in the cosmopolitan city of Suzhou, and his preeminent follower Wen Zhengming (1470–1559) exemplified Ming literati ideals. Both men chose to reside at home rather than follow official careers, devoting themselves to self-cultivation through a lifetime spent reinterpreting the styles of Yuan scholar-painters.

Morally charged images of reclusion remained a potent political symbol during the early years of the Manchu Qing dynasty, a period in which many Ming loyalists lived in self-enforced retirement. Often lacking access to important collections of old masters, loyalist artists drew inspiration from the natural beauty of the local scenery.

Images of nature have remained a potent source of inspiration for artists down to the present day. While the Chinese landscape has been transformed by millennia of human occupation, Chinese artistic expression has also been deeply imprinted with images of the natural world. Viewing Chinese landscape paintings, it is clear that Chinese depictions of nature are seldom mere representations of the external world. Rather, they are expressions of the mind and heart of the individual artists—cultivated landscapes that embody the culture and cultivation of their masters.


Contributors

Department of Asian Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2004


Further Reading

Barnhart, Richard M., et al. Three Thousand Years of Chinese Painting. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1997.

Cahill, James. Chinese Painting. New York: Rizzoli, 1990.

Clunas, Craig. Art in China. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997.

Fong, Wen C., et al. Possessing the Past: Treasures from the National Palace Museum, Taipei. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1996. See on MetPublications

Hearn, Maxwell K. How to Read Chinese Paintings. New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2008. See on MetPublications

Sullivan, Michael. The Arts of China. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1984.


Citation

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Department of Asian Art. “Landscape Painting in Chinese Art.” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/clpg/hd_clpg.htm (October 2004)