Exhibition expounds on 'vision and verse' in Chinese art

    Importance of poetry in painting displayed in 90 artworks at The Met in New York

    By ZHAO XU | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2024-05-28 07:15
    Share
    Share - WeChat
    Wangchuan Villa, by an unidentified artist, is on exhibition at The Met Fifth Avenue galleries in New York. It depicts China's eighth-century poet and painter Wang Wei's country estate in Lantian county, Shaanxi province. CHINA DAILY

    "As there happened to be a volume of Du Fu's poetry on the table, I selected one suitable couplet for inscription on each of my landscapes," wrote Wang Jian, a much celebrated painter living in 17th-century China, on the final page of an album of pictures he painted for a longtime friend.

    Wang also wrote that he had genuinely enjoyed the friendship since the days "when we were young and vigorous".

    For Joseph Dolberg, an expert on ancient Chinese painting from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, the painted album, with each page in the style of an old master who had come before Wang, is a priceless item of art.

    It is also a testament to the friendship between two deeply cultured men who shared not only a passion for art, but also pain and suffering.

    Moreover, it provides a partial understanding of a phenomenon in Chinese art history.

    "When painters sat down to paint in ancient China, why were they so often painting poetic themes?" asked Dolberg, who has attempted to answer that question through an exhibition titled Vision and Verse: The Poetry of Chinese Painting. The exhibition is on at The Met Fifth Avenue galleries in New York and features 90 works drawn almost entirely from The Met's collection.

    Although Wang made his choice of poems sound purely accidental, in reality this may not be the case, said Dolberg.

    "Based on my unscientific observation of Chinese painting history, Du Fu (712-770) is the most often inscribed poet from the Tang Dynasty (618-907)," he said, referring to an era in Chinese history when poetry writing is believed to have reached an artistic pinnacle.

    Around 1,150 poems attributed to Du that have survived to this day offer proof to the immensity of his oeuvre, which a latter-day painter could "go to and grab whatever he wanted… to deepen and expand his viewer's pictorial experience and imagination", to quote Dolberg.

    But that number alone can't explain it all. "The prestige of Du Fu the poet started to grow posthumously, during the final century of the Tang Dynasty," said Zhang Yinan from the National Library of China who specializes in ancient Chinese poetry.

    "It reached such a height in the succeeding Song Dynasty (960-1279) that Du Fu became a cult in himself, commonly worshipped by educated members of society, some of whom, Su Shi included, had used brushes to write and paint," said Zhang, referring to the Song Dynasty polymath who was in turn immortalized by his own words.

    This was despite — some might say because of — the fact that for a large part of his life, Du had endured, if not outright anonymity, then repeated rejection and constant poverty. "Du's personal travails had certainly struck a strong chord with those who were subjected to similar experiences at one point or another, and who constituted the bulk of the literati group in pre-modern China," Zhang said.

    In another painting on view at the museum, a speck of a figure stands atop a low cliff facing the magnitude of nature. The painter, from the 17th century, adorned his fanned-out work with two lines from a Du poem that goes: "The emerald cliff catches the breeze, a lone cloud thin; Red maples, their backs to the sun, ten thousand trees dense."

    1 2 3 4 Next   >>|
    Top
    BACK TO THE TOP
    English
    Copyright 1995 - . All rights reserved. The content (including but not limited to text, photo, multimedia information, etc) published in this site belongs to China Daily Information Co (CDIC). Without written authorization from CDIC, such content shall not be republished or used in any form. Note: Browsers with 1024*768 or higher resolution are suggested for this site.
    License for publishing multimedia online 0108263

    Registration Number: 130349
    FOLLOW US
    亚洲中文字幕无码一去台湾| 亚洲成av人片在线观看无码不卡| 国产网红主播无码精品| 精品久久久无码中文字幕 | 无码丰满少妇2在线观看| 天堂新版8中文在线8| 国产精品无码久久四虎| 精品人妻系列无码一区二区三区 | 亚洲爆乳无码精品AAA片蜜桃| 在线精品无码字幕无码AV| 无码精品日韩中文字幕| 国产精品ⅴ无码大片在线看| 亚洲AV中文无码字幕色三| 日本乱人伦中文字幕网站| 亚洲高清无码专区视频| 久久精品无码一区二区三区免费| 亚洲VA中文字幕无码毛片| 中文字幕欧美日本亚洲| 中文字幕一区二区三区5566| 无码人妻精品中文字幕免费东京热| 国产产无码乱码精品久久鸭| 无码精品国产一区二区三区免费| 四虎影视无码永久免费| 中文字幕在线无码一区| 最近2019好看的中文字幕| 日本乱中文字幕系列| 亚洲日韩乱码中文无码蜜桃臀网站 | 国色天香中文字幕在线视频 | 在线观看中文字幕码| 最近的中文字幕在线看视频 | 久本草在线中文字幕亚洲欧美| gogo少妇无码肉肉视频| 国产成人AV一区二区三区无码| 久久无码人妻一区二区三区| 无码精品人妻一区二区三区免费看 | 国产∨亚洲V天堂无码久久久| 无码视频在线观看| 午夜无码A级毛片免费视频| 亚洲Aⅴ无码专区在线观看q| 少妇人妻无码专区视频| 狠狠躁天天躁无码中文字幕图|