Painting of One Hundred Themes

Description

The front of this screen features an assortment of subjects: birds and flowers, landscapes, and scenes of everyday life, mostly in monochromatic ink with light colors. The screen’s reverse side conveys a number of classical poems about the fleeting beauty of the four seasons. Traditionally, only one side of a folding screen bears painted or embroidered images, since these were used as a background furnishing. In Korean houses by the 1800s and early 1900s, however, two-sided folding screens became noticeably popular, possibly inspired by Japanese double-sided folding screens, which mainly served as room dividers in Japanese households.

Provenance

Collection in Pusan, Korea, to Gordon K. Mott (?-1955); Gordon K. Mott [1914-1998], Lakewood, OH, bequest to the Cleveland Museum of Art (1955-1998); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1998-)

Painting of One Hundred Themes

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late 1800s

Accession Number

1998.286

Medium

Ten-panel folding screen affixed with album leaves (obverse), calligraphy (reverse), ink and color on silk

Dimensions

Overall: 117.7 x 335 cm (46 5/16 x 131 7/8 in.); Painting only: 164.5 x 43.6 cm (64 3/4 x 17 3/16 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Bequest of Gordon K. Mott