Bird Sleeping on a Plum Tree

Description

The plum’s status as the orthodox symbol of the literati’s pure spirit originated in Lin Bu’s poem "Tiny Plum Flowers in Mountain Garden." The plum was also widely depicted in Korean paintings as part of the Four Gentlemen—or Four Gracious Plants—motif. Here, the plum and bamboo express literati spirituality while the bird with its head pointing downward indicates the artist’s feelings about the unstable situation at the end of the Joseon period. Yang Ki-hun was a Korean scholar-official renowned for painting and calligraphy. King Gojong (reigned 1863–1907) was one of Yang's prominent patrons.

Provenance

The Honorable Joseph P. Carroll and Roberta Carroll, MD, New York, NY (?-1998); (Joseph P. Carroll, Ltd., New York, NY, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (1998); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1998-)

Bird Sleeping on a Plum Tree

Yang Ki-hun

early 1900s

Accession Number

1998.31

Medium

hanging scroll, ink on silk

Dimensions

Overall: 103 x 112.4 cm (40 9/16 x 44 1/4 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

John L. Severance Fund