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Along the Riverbank: Chinese Paintings from the C. C. Wang Family Collection

Posted By: TimMa
Along the Riverbank: Chinese Paintings from the C. C. Wang Family Collection

Along the Riverbank: Chinese Paintings from the C. C. Wang Family Collection
Metropolitan Museum of Art/H.N.Abrams | 1981 | ISBN: 0870999052/0810965410 | English | PDF | 182 pages | 40.22 Mb

This publication celebrates the promised gift to The Metropolitan Museum of Art from the Oscar Tang family of twelve major works from the C. C. Wang Family Collection, one of the great private collections of Chinese old master paintings to be assembled in the twentieth century. Ranging in date from the tenth to the early eighteenth century, these works significantly extend the Museum's holdings and reveal those areas of Chinese painting of particular interest to Mr. Wang. An accomplished artist, Ch'i-Ch'ien Wang, a resident of New York City since 1949, began collecting paintings in Shanghai more than seventy years ago. Works from his collection, long known to Western scholars and connoisseurs, are now in many American public institutions and universities. The Metropolitan owns some sixty works formerly in this collection, the twelve presented here constituting the most recent addition to the Museum's holdings from this source. Along the Riverbank is published on the occasion of the exhibition "The Artist as Collector: Masterpieces of Chinese Paintings from the C. C. Wang Family Collection," which includes most of the works acquired by the Museum from Mr. Wang since 1973.

Among the twelve paintings presented here is the famed Riverbank, attributed to the tenth-century master Dong Yuan (active 950s–60s), one of the patriarchs of the scholarly Southern school of landscape painting. It is generally recognized as one of the rare extant paintings marking the inception of the monumental landscape tradition in China. An essay by Wen C. Fong presents an in-depth stylistic analysis and contextual history of the painting. A physical analysis of the work is also included.

An extended essay by Maxwell K. Hearn examines all twelve paintings. The major examples of landscape art include Simple Retreat, by the renowned scholar-artist Wang Meng (1308–1385), who drew inspiration from the vision of landscape created by Dong Yuan and other tenth-century painters. In addition to landscapes, the collection features several important figure paintings, including Palace Banquet, by an unknown Academy painter of the Southern Tang dynasty (967–75) and a long monochrome narrative by Zhao Cangyun, a late-thirteenth-century survivor of the Mongol conquest. The genre of flower-and-bird painting is represented by Mandarin Ducks and Hollyhocks, a pictorial metaphor of marital happiness by the leading early Ming academic master Lü Ji (active late 15th century), and by Two Eagles, a defiant symbol of political resistance by Bada Shanren (1616–1705), a member of the Ming royal house who lived through the occupation of China by the Manchus.
Director's Foreword
Philippe de Montebello

Acknowledgments

Riverbank
Wen C. Fong

Along the Riverbank
Maxwell K. Hearn

Catalogue
Maxwell K. Hearn with Yiguo Zhang

Appendix

Riverbank: The Physical and Documentary Evidence
Maxwell K. Hearn

Bibliography

Index


Mawell K. Hearn is Curator in the Department of Asian Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Wen C. Fong is Consultative Chairman and Douglas Dillon Curator of Chinese Painting and Calligraphy in the Department of Asian Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art and Edwards S. Sanford Professor of Art and Archaeology at Princeton University.


Choice Reviews Online
"… strongly recommended …"
Library Journal
"Introduced by two eminent scholars of Chinese art, this exhibition catalog provides a detailed stylistic analysis and contextual history of the 12 Chinese paintings recently given to the Metropolitan Museum of Art by the C.C. Wang Family Collection–known to Western scholars and connoisseurs as one of the most important private collections of Chinese Old Master paintings assembled in the 20th century. Among the 12 masterpieces, dating from the tenth to the early 18th century, is the celebrated "Riverbank." This piece is generally considered by art historians to be a groundbreaking work that marks the beginning of the long tradition of monumental landscape painting in China. In addition to landscapes, the collection also includes figure paintings, a monochrome narrative, and flower-and-bird paintings by renowned Old Masters. Illustrated with mostly black-and-white illustrations, this attractive but narrow work is recommended for specialized, in-depth collections at academic and research libraries."
-Lucia S. Chen, NYPL


Along the Riverbank: Chinese Paintings from the C. C. Wang Family Collection