Recluse playing the zither in a pine grove

ca. 1540
Not on view
Wen Zhengming was the most influential Suzhou painter of the sixteenth century. He created his own immortality with his dogged determination to excel, his dozens of students, and an unusually long life of prodigious artistic production. In Playing the Qin in the Shade of the Pines, one of Wen's largest works, the freely executed boulders and impressionistically rendered trees coalesce into powerful interlocking forms when viewed, as intended, from across a spacious hall. The scroll is roughly contemporaneous with Wen's equally large calligraphic scrolls of the late 1520s, which were commissioned by the Jiajing emperor (r. 1522–66).

Playing the seven-string zither (qin), a versatile instrument able to suggest nature's sounds, is associated with the solitary self-cultivation and reclusive existence of the scholar. A seventeenth-century qin is on display in the Ming Room of the Astor Court.

Artwork Details

Object Information
  • 明 文徵明 松陰飛瀑圖  軸
  • Title: Recluse playing the zither in a pine grove
  • Artist: Wen Zhengming (Chinese, 1470–1559)
  • Period: Ming dynasty (1368–1644)
  • Date: ca. 1540
  • Culture: China
  • Medium: Hanging scroll; ink on paper
  • Dimensions: Image: 137 1/2 x 40 1/2 in. (349.3 x 102.9 cm)
    Overall with mounting: 193 1/2 x 50 3/8 in. (491.5 x 128 cm)
    Overall with knobs: 193 1/2 x 55 7/8 in. (491.5 x 141.9 cm)
  • Classification: Paintings
  • Credit Line: Edward Elliott Family Collection, Purchase, The Dillon Fund Gift, 1982
  • Object Number: 1982.1.6
  • Curatorial Department: Asian Art

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