Description
Bamboo and orchids are motifs associated with the virtues of the scholar-official. Bamboo that bends but does not break stands for moral integrity, endurance, and loyalty. Wild, fragrant orchids that bloom in the shadow symbolize modesty and the aura of learnedness. Rocks are often considered to be miniature versions of mountains that form the universe. This monochrome ink painting is brushed on paper in a masterfully calligraphic manner. While the rocks are delineated in chalky, dry strokes showing the effect of flying white (feibai), the bamboo and orchids are drawn with a swift brush demonstrating the virtuosity of the artist.
Provenance
Gu Xin 顧信 [1279–1353]; Gu Ying 顧瑛 [1310–1369]; Mo Zhichong 莫至翀 [1400s]; Wu Ting 吳廷 [first half of 1600s]; Xu Shouhe 徐守和 [1600s]; Liang Qingbiao 梁清標 [1620–1691]; Tang Zuomei 唐作梅 [late 1700s–1800s]; (Frank Caro [1904–1980], New York, NY, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (?–1963); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1963–)
Accession Number
1963.515
Medium
Handscroll; ink on paper
Dimensions
Mounted: 52.4 x 1337.7 cm (20 5/8 x 526 5/8 in.); Image: 50.9 x 147.8 cm (20 1/16 x 58 3/16 in.)
Classification
Painting
Credit Line
John L. Severance Fund by exchange