The Shanglin Park: Imperial Hunt
Terms of Use
Usage Conditions ApplyAt A Glance
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Period
late 16th century to mid 17th century (ca. 1640) -
Geography
China -
Material
Ink and color on silk -
Dimension
H x W (image): 44.9 x 1281.1 cm (17 11/16 x 504 3/8 in) -
Accession Number
F1913.47 -
EDAN ID
edanmdm:fsg_F1913.47
Object Details
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Artist
Attributed to Qiu Ying 仇英 (ca. 1494-1552) -
Label
Outside his capital of Chang'an (modern Xi'an, Shaanxi Province), Emperor Wu of the Han dynasty (reigned 141-87 B.C.E.) set aside a large wilderness preserve for imperial hunts and excursions, and commissioned the poet Sima Xiangru (179-117 B.C.E.) to compose a long prose poem, or rhapsody (fu), to record its many pleasures. Sima's dazzling verbal description of the park's terrain and the extravagant hunts that took place in it, has long been celebrated as one of the most extraordinary displays of poetic creativity in the Chinese language. His fu served as the basis for this composition by the Ming dynasty painter Qiu Ying, who created The Imperial Park over a five-year period.Executed in the meticulous blue-and-green style, Qiu's painting was immediately hailed by contemporaries as one of his greatest masterpieces. His initial version of the painting is apparently lost, but the composition survives in several copies, such as the work seen here, which may be an early second version. More than twelve-and-a-half meters of silk in length and painted with various costly pigments--including blue and green mineral colors created from crushed azurite and malachite--this lavish scroll was undoubtedly intended for a collector of expensive taste and considerable wealth. The section displayed here illustrates the following passage of Sima's poem:Detached palaces, separate lodges,Stretch over the mountains, straddle the valleys:Tall corridors pour out in four directions,With double decks and twisting passageways;Fitted with ornate rafters and jade finials,Carriage roads are laced and linked together.In the covered walkways to walk completely around,Long is the course and midway one must halt for the night.On leveled peaks they built the halls,With tiered terraces rising story upon story,And cavernous rooms in the crags and crannies.Downward through the deep darkness nothing can be seen;Upward, one may clutch the rafters to touch the sky.Shooting stars pass through the doors and wickets;Arching rainbows stretch over the rails and porches.Translation adapted from David R. Knechtges, trans., Wen Xuan, or Selections of Refined Literature, vol. 2 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987), 89. -
Provenance
To 1913Edmund Backhouse (1873-1944), Peking, to 1913 [1]From 1913 to 1919Charles Lang Freer (1854-1919), purchased from Edmund Backhouse through T.J. Larkin, London, in 1913 [2]From 1920Freer Gallery of Art, gift of Charles Lang Freer in 1920 [3]Notes:[1] See Curatorial Remark 1 in the object record. See also, Original Kakemono and Makimono List, L. 923, Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery Archives. This object exhibits seals, colophons, or inscriptions that could provide additional information regarding the object’s history; see Curatorial Remarks in the object record for further details.[2] See note 1.[3] The original deed of Charles Lang Freer's gift was signed in 1906. The collection was received in 1920 upon the completion of the Freer Gallery. -
Collection
Freer Gallery of Art Collection -
Exhibition History
Looking Out, Looking In: Art in Late Imperial China (October 14, 2017 - ongoing)Old Tales Retold: Narrative in Chinese Painting (April 20 to October 20, 2013)Palaces and Pavilions: Grand Architecture in Chinese Painting (September 29, 2002 to March 30, 2003)In the Mountains (January 31 to August 2, 1998)Studies in Connoisseurship 1923-1983 (September 23, 1983 to March 1, 1984) -
Previous custodian or owner
Edmund Backhouse (1873-1944) (C.L. Freer source)Charles Lang Freer (1854-1919) -
Origin
China -
Credit Line
Gift of Charles Lang Freer -
Type
Painting -
Restrictions and Rights
Usage Conditions Apply
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