Scholar Reclining and Watching Rising Clouds, Poem by Wang Wei
詳細資料
Artists at the Southern Song Painting Academy were often trained in illustrating poetry. Here, Ma Lin responds to a poem composed by Tang poet Wang Wei (701–about 761) and written by emperor Song Lizong: “I walk unto where waters end—And sit down to watch when clouds arise.” While two thirds of the round fan leaf remain empty, Ma Lin paints a scholar who gazes at a vast landscape panorama with a shore shrouded in mist and faint mountain ranges in the distance.This leaf and the emperor's calligraphy were originally mounted together and must have made a precious imperial gift when bestowed on a worthy official or high dignitary.
John L. Severance Fund
?-1961(Nagatani, Inc., Chicago, IL, ?-1961)
1961-presentThe Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH, 1961 to present
Image: 25.1 x 25.3 公分 (9 7/8 x 9 15/16 英吋)
with mat: 33.3 x 40.5 公分 (13 1/8 x 15 15/16 英吋)
絹本
Artist's signature: Your subject, Ma Lin.
2 seals on mounting of Chu Sheng-chai (20th c.).
(Inscription for .1 - Scholar Reclining and Watching Rising Clouds)
Artist's signature: Your subject, Ma Lin.
2 seals on mounting of Chu Sheng-chai (20th c.).
(Inscription for .2 - Poem by Wang Wei)
The inscription between the two imperial seals reads, "Presented to Chung-kuei".
Seals and Colophons:
The top left seal has the cyclical date "ping-ch'en" (1256): the lower left seal is the Seal for Imperial Calligraphy: 1 seal of Chu-Sheng-chai (20th Century) remounted onto the facing leaf.
Remarks:
The 2 lines of poetry from right to left read:
"I walk unto where waters end--
And sit down to watch when clouds arise."
水墨