Hong Kong Palace Museum | The Making of Masterpieces: Chinese Painting and Calligraphy from the Palace Museum

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The Making of Masterpieces: Chinese Painting and Calligraphy from the Palace Museum

Gallery 8
The Making of Masterpieces: Chinese Painting and Calligraphy from the Palace Museum
Gallery 8

This special exhibition offers visitors a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to appreciate thirty five (six paintings mounted as an album) early treasures of Chinese painting and calligraphy from the Palace Museum collection, many of which will be displayed outside of the Palace Museum for the first time. With three rotations, it explores how these works were made and transmitted through various artistic, cultural, and historical lenses, and how they came to be viewed as masterpieces in the Chinese art canon.

Female Immortals in Elysium

Ruan Gao (active 10th century)
Female Immortals in Elysium
Five Dynasties period, 10th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
42.7 × 178.1 cm
© The Palace Museum

Rotation 1: July 2 – July 31, 2022
  • Wang Xizhi (303–361)
    After Rain in Running Script (Song copy)
  • Mi Fu (1051–1107)
    Encomium on a Mountain Inkstone in Running Script 
  • Zhao Ji (1082–1135)
    Returning Boats on a Snowy River
  • Zhao Fu (active mid-12th century)
    Ten Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains 
  • Li Song (1166–1243)
    Basket of Flowers
  • Unidentified Artist
    Spring Morning at the Riverside
  • Li Kan (1245–1320)
    Four Purities
  • Zhao Mengfu (1254–1322)
    Watering Horses in Autumn
  • Huang Gongwang (1269–1354)
    Stone Cliff at the Pond of Heaven
  • Ni Zan (1306–1374)
    Wutong, Bamboo, and Elegant Rock
Rotation 2: August 3 – September 4, 2022

Gu Kaizhi (346–407)
Nymph of the Luo River (Northern Song copy)

Nymph of the Luo River (Northern Song copy)
Northern Song dynasty, 11th or 12th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

This painting is based on a classic poem by Cao Zhi, a prince who lived during the Three Kingdoms period. The poem tells the story of a romance between Cao and the nymph of the Luo River, and inspired many works of painting and calligraphy, including a painting possibly by Gu Kaizhi of the Six Dynasties period that served as a model for later artists.

This handscroll is believed to be a Northern Song copy of Gu’s painting. One of the oldest surviving illustrations of poem, this painting with a continuous composition depicts many scenes in the poem, from the moment Cao Zhi and the nymph meet until their parting. The rich colours, silky lines, and out-of-proportion figures perfectly reflect the artistic styles of the Six Dynasties period.

The painting became one of the Qianlong Emperor’s favourite works after it entered the Qing imperial collection in 1741 and was recorded in the Treasured Boxes of the Stone Moat, a catalogue of important works in the Qing imperial collection. The emperor composed a frontispiece and several colophons expressing his admiration for the work and ordered the court painter Ding Guanpeng to make a copy of it. He viewed the original as superior to other versions and had it stored in his Imperial Study. In 1922, the painting was removed from the Forbidden City by the last emperor, Puyi, who bestowed it upon his brother, Pujie. It was later purchased by the Changchun Antique Shop before it was ultimately returned to the Palace Museum.

 

Attributed to Yu Shinan (558–638)
Copy of the Orchid Pavilion Preface in Running Script

Copy of the Orchid Pavilion Preface in Running Script

Tang dynasty, 7th century
Handscroll, ink on paper
© The Palace Museum

In 353 during the Eastern Jin dynasty, the calligrapher Wang Xizhi attended a gathering at the Orchid Pavilion and wrote a preface in running script to the poems composed at the event. In the Tang dynasty, Emperor Taizong acquired this calligraphy and recorded it in the Inventory of Wang Xizhi’s Calligraphy. It is alleged that the emperor took the original to his grave, but his decree to copy the work preserved it for future generations, and the Northern Song scholar Mi Fu later hailed it as “the best calligraphy under Heaven”.

Yu Shinan’s version is one of only a few surviving copies from the Tang period. The ink of the calligraphy has dulled with age and shows signs of mending, with occasionally hesitant execution. During the Ming dynasty, the connoisseur Dong Qichang attributed it to the Tang calligrapher Chu Suiliang, but later decided it could be the work of Yu Shinan—an attribution that was widely accepted by connoisseurs of the Qing dynasty.

Held in the court collections of the Southern Song and Yuan dynasties, the calligraphy passed through the hands of various private collectors in the Ming dynasty, when it was recorded via rubbings and documented in catalogues. After reentering the court collection in the Qing dynasty, the Qianlong Emperor recorded it in the Treasured Boxes of the Stone Moat, a catalogue of important works of painting and calligraphy in the Qing imperial collection. He also had it engraved on a stone pillar in the Garden of Perfect Brightness. Here it joined other versions of Orchid Pavilion calligraphy from the emperor’s collection, which were inscribed on seven other pillars.

 

Attributed to Zhao Boju (around 1120–1162)
Autumn Colours over Rivers and Mountains

Autumn Colours over Rivers and Mountains

Southern Song dynasty, 12th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

Although this landscape is unsigned, it was identified as a work of the Southern Song painter Zhao Boju by Zhu Biao, son of the Hongwu Emperor of the Ming dynasty. Zhao Boju was a distant member of the Song imperial family. His distinctive blue-and-green landscape paintings were influenced by the style of the renowned Tang dynasty painter Li Sixun and his son Li Zhaodao.

The mountains in this painting were first contoured with lines, then accented with “small axe cut” texture strokes to create depth, and finally finished with colours. Majestic and imposing, they are comparable to those of Northern Song painting, but with subtle colours that resemble the literati ink paintings and lyrical landscapes of the Southern Song period. These features were particularly admired by later connoisseurs such as Dong Qichang, who described Zhao’s paintings as having “exquisite workmanship with a scholar’s touch”.

Once in the imperial collections of the Ming and Qing dynasties, the painting bears the seal marks of the Qianlong, Jiaqing, and Xuantong emperors. In 1922, it was removed from the palace and brought to Changchun. After the liberation of Northeast China, it was housed at the Dongbei Museum (now the Liaoning Provincial Museum). It was transferred to the Palace Museum in 1959.

 

Ma Yuan (active late 12th or early 13th century)
Water

Water

Southern Song dynasty, about 1222
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

Ma Yuan, a native of Hezhong (present-day Yongji, Shanxi province), was born into a family of painters. He served at the Southern Song Painting Academy during the reigns of Emperor Guangzong and Emperor Ningzong and was deeply beloved by the imperial family. His landscape paintings have a distinctive one-corner composition, for which he received the nickname “One-Corner Ma”.

This handscroll brings together twelve waterscapes from different seasons, times, and locations, reflecting the Song imperial family’s fondness for works related to nature and the four seasons. Ma’s “one-corner” composition, together with concise brushwork and the intelligent use of blank space, skillfully depicts an expansive span of flowing water.

The handscroll was probably commissioned by Empress Yang, the wife of Emperor Ningzong, with each painting bearing her inscription and seal. It was collected by the Southern Song court, and later by the prominent Ming and Qing collectors Wang Shizhen, Geng Zhaozong, and Liang Qingbiao, before it entered the collection of the Qing court. In 1922, it was removed from the Forbidden City when the former Xuantong Emperor Puyi gave it to his brother, Pujie. Later collected by Zhu Guang, who became mayor of Guangzhou after the founding of the People’s Republic of China, it was donated to the government by Zhu before returned to the Palace Museum in 1953.

 

Lu Lengjia (active 730–760)
Six Arhats (Song copy)

 

Zhao Ji (1082–1135)
Poem on a Summer Day in Regular Script

 

Unidentified artist
Travelling Bullock Carts

 

Deng Wenyuan (1259–1328)
Hasty Writing in Draft-Cursive Script

 

Zhao Yong (after 1293–1361), Wang Mian (1287–1359), Zhu Derun (1294–1365), Zhang Guan (active 14th century), Fang Congyi (active 14th century)
Five Paintings by Yuan Masters (Due to space constraint inside the display case, only the paintings by Zhao Yong, Wang Mian, and Zhu Derun are displayed.)

 

Wang Meng (d. 1385)
Dwelling in the Summer Mountains

Rotation 3: September 7 – October 7, 2022

Ruan Gao (active 10th century)
Female Immortals in Elysium

Female Immortals in Elysium

Five dynasties, 10th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

Many scholars consider this to be the only authentic work by Ruan Gao. According to the Painting Catalogue of the Xuanhe Reign, Ruan was a skilled painter who excelled at female figures. During the Northern Song dynasty, only four paintings by Ruan Gao entered the imperial collection, one of which had a similar title to this painting and was described as “enthralling”.

Depicting the Land of Immortals, the work is executed with fluid and dense brushstrokes. In the centre, female immortals recite poems while playing a string instrument (sanxian) near a dancing phoenix. To the right other female immortals clear a table. On the far left and right, three female immortals arrive either riding a dragon, a crane, the wind, or on foot. This configuration is rarely found on handscrolls, but appears on earlier bronze mirrors.

The painting entered the court collection in the Qing dynasty and was recorded in the Treasured Boxes of the Stone Moat, a catalogue of important works of painting and calligraphy in the Qing imperial collection. The Qianlong Emperor ordered the court painter Gu Quan to make a copy, which was later housed at the imperial palace in Shengjing (present-day Shenyang) during the reign of the Guangxu Emperor. The original was kept at the Palace of Established Happiness inside the Forbidden City. In 1922, the former Xuantong Emperor Puyi gifted it to his brother Pujie, which saved it from a fire that destroyed the Palace the following year.

The painting was donated to the Chinese government in 1958 and later entered the Palace Museum, making it the only institution in the world that houses a work by Ruan Gao.

Gu Kaizhi (346–407)
Nymph of the Luo River (Southern Song copy)

Nymph of the Luo River (Southern Song copy)

Southern Song dynasty, 12th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

This painting is based on a classic poem composed by Cao Zhi, a prince who lived during the Three Kingdoms period. The poem tells the story of a romance between Cao and the nymph of the Luo River, and inspired many works of painting and calligraphy, including a painting, possibly by Gu Kaizhi of the Six Dynasties period, that served as a model for later artists.

Among surviving paintings that illustrate the poem, this handscroll is particularly rich and complete. The continuous composition depicts many scenes in the poem, from the moment Cao Zhi and the nymph met until their parting. It features many details not found in other versions, such as the nymph picking pearls and feathers.

Most scholars date this handscroll to the Southern Song dynasty. The red-brown tones convey a peaceful atmosphere, and the figures are delicately depicted in a landscape formed by texture strokes and ink washes. Selected lines from the poem are written in square grids in the style of the Tang calligrapher Yan Zhenqing, which is typical of works from the mid-Northern Song or early Southern Song period.

The presence of the numerous seals suggests that the painting was highly regarded by various Qing emperors. It was stored in the Imperial Study and recorded in the Treasured Boxes of the Stone Moat, a catalogue of important works in the imperial collection. In 1922, the painting was removed from the Forbidden City by the last emperor, Puyi, who bestowed it upon his brother, Pujie. It was later owned by an antique dealer before it was returned to the Palace Museum.

Ouyang Xun(557–641)
Biography of Zhang Han in Running-Regular Script (Tang copy)

Biography of Zhang Han in Running-Regular Script (Tang copy)

Tang dynasty, about 8th or 9th century
Album leaf, ink on paper
© The Palace Museum

Ouyang Xun was one of the “Four Masters of Early Tang”—a group which also included Yu Shinan, Chu Suiliang, and Xue Ji. An erudite scholar, his calligraphy was highly regarded by Emperor Taizong of Tang, as well as many of his contemporaries and later calligraphers. It was so influential that it was used as a model for the typeface used in woodblock-printed books of the Song dynasty.

The prominent Tang critic Zhang Huaiguan described Xun as “proficient in eight scripts”. Employed here is a mixture of his best-known regular- and running-script calligraphy. Although now recognised as a tracing copy that was probably produced by a later copyist, it is regarded as being on the same level with Ouyang’s authentic masterpieces. The calligraphy faithfully reflects his well-structured and elongated characters, executed with rigid and angular brush strokes. The text recounts the unambitious yet contented life of Zhang Han, whose biography merited an entry in the History of Jin.

The work once belonged to the Northern and Southern Song courts. Recorded in the Calligraphy Catalogue of the Xuanhe Period, it was one of the few works retained in the imperial collection after the collapse of the Northern Song dynasty and the relocation of the court to the Southern Song capital of Lin’an (present-day Hangzhou). It entered the Qing imperial collection during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor, and was kept in the palace until it entered the Palace Museum collection. Little of Xun’s original calligraphy survives today, even in the form of copies— this is one of only four tracing copies made after his work.

Ma Hezhi (active 12th century)
Illustrations to The Book of Songs: Songs Beginning with “Deer Call”

Illustrations to The Book of Songs: Songs Beginning with “Deer Call”

Southern Song dynasty, 12th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

Ma Hezhi, a native of Qiantang (present-day Hangzhou), was a renowned painter of the Southern Song period. His landscape and figure paintings were judged to be superior by both the Southern Song Emperor Gaozong and his successor, Xiaozong.

The Book of Songs, dating from the 11th to late 7th century BCE, is one of China’s most celebrated poetry anthologies. During the Southern Song dynasty, Gaozong or Xiaozong ordered Ma to illustrate 305 paintings for the anthology. Among extant examples, Songs Beginning with “Deer Call” is an undisputed masterpiece, distinguished by its elegant palette, calligraphic brushwork, flowing drapery, dynamic rocks, and meticulous architectural drawing. This scroll comprises illustrations accompanying ten songs from The Book of Songs as well as three prefaces. The calligraphy has been attributed to Gaozong, but the brushwork and character structuring suggest they could have been written by a copyist from the Imperial Academy of Calligraphy in imitation of the emperor’s style.

The present scroll passed through the collections of the Prince of Qianning and Qian Neng, a famous eunuch during the Ming. It was acquired by the Qing court during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor. In his colophon to this work, the Qianlong Emperor explained that Songs Beginning with “Deer Call” would serve as a model for the twelve Book of Songs scrolls in the imperial collection. These were later deposited in the Hall of Learning Poetry in 1770, followed by another two scrolls in 1784 and 1791. In 1922, the painting was removed from the Forbidden City by the last emperor, Puyi, who bestowed it upon his brother, Pujie. It was purchased by an antique shop in Beijing in the 1960s before it was returned to the Palace Museum.

Li Di (active 12th century)
Hawk on a Maple Tree Eyeing a Pheasant

Hawk on a Maple Tree Eyeing a Pheasant

Southern Song dynasty, 1196
Hanging scroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

This painting was signed and dated by Li Di, an artist whose work was highly regarded from the Yuan dynasty onward. Little is known about Li, except that he was a court painter who excelled in bird-and-flower painting.

Raptors hunting prey emerged as a popular subject for painting in the early Tang dynasty. When compared with other paintings on this theme, it’s clear that Li Di excelled in capturing motion and a sense of the spontaneous moment. This painting emphasises the reaction of the frightened pheasant, with the beaks, claws, and feathers of both birds depicted with remarkable precision and elegance that reflects the influence of highly naturalistic Northern Song painting. Tree trunks are delineated with saturated ink, while the leaves and grass are rendered in ink outlines and filled with colours. The painting is remarkable in ambition and scale—its enormous size suggests that it was originally mounted on a decorative screen.

The work likely influenced the paintings of the later periods, in which the hawk was used to represent dignity and independence. Once owned by Prince Yi of the Qing dynasty, it was given to the Palace Museum by the Bureau of Cultural Relics in the 1960s.

Li Song (1166–1243)
Viewing the Tidal Bore on the Qiantang River

Viewing the Tidal Bore on the Qiantang River

Southern Song dynasty, late 12th or mid-13th century
Handscroll, ink and colour on silk
© The Palace Museum

Li Song, a native of Qiantang (present-day Hangzhou), was very familiar with the landscape and life along the river. The great finesse and realism of his figure, landscape, bird-and-flower, and ruled-line paintings earned Li Song a place in the Imperial Painting Academy during the reigns of three Song emperors, for which he received the sobriquet “Veteran Painter of Three Reigns”.

The present handscroll is one of the earliest extant paintings to celebrate the spectacle of the Qiantang River tidal bore—a phenomenon that occurs when the incoming tide forms a wave. Here, the painter captures boats hastening ashore as the river begins to swell and billow. On the near side of the river, in the foreground, the bank is lined by various architectural structures whose rooves peer through the mist, bringing to mind the prosperity of the Southern Song capital, Hangzhou. In the background, pale green washes define the sparingly delineated hills.

Lacking both a signature and an artist’s seal, the painting was attributed to Li Song during the late Ming dynasty. The handscroll bears colophons by Zhang Renjin and Yang Ji of the late Yuan and early Ming. It was in the collections of Ming collectors An Guo and Xiang Yuanbian, and Qing collector Liang Qingbiao, before entering the Qing imperial collection during the reign of the Qianlong Emperor. In 1922 the former Xuantong Emperor, Puyi, removed it from the palace and gave it to his brother Pujie. It was acquired by the collector Zhang Yuanzeng before it was returned to the Palace Museum in 1954.

Xie An (320–385)
Death of a Palace Attendant in Running Script (Song copy)

Guan Daosheng (1262–1319)
Late Autumn in Running Script (calligraphy by Zhao Mengfu)

Zhao Mengfu (1254–1322), Huang Gongwang (1269–1354), Xu Ben (1335–1380)
Calligraphy and Painting of Timely Clearing after Snowfall

Wu Zhen (1280–1354)
Fisherman 

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Hong Kong Palace Museum

West Kowloon Cultural District, 8 Museum Drive, Kowloon


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