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NYC's Metropolitan Museum To Examine Chinese Gardens

08-09-2012

 


Metropolitan Museum Examines Chinese Garden Theme in Special Exhibition Opening This Summer

Exhibition Dates:  August 18, 2012 – January 6, 2013
Exhibition Location:  Galleries for Chinese Painting and Calligraphy
Press Preview:  Friday, August 17, 10:00 a.m.–noon 


An exhibition exploring the rich interactions between pictorial and garden arts in China across more than 1,000 years will be on view at The Metropolitan Museum of Art beginning August 18.  Showcasing more than 60 paintings as well as ceramics, carved bamboo, lacquerware, metalwork, textiles, and contemporary photographs—Chinese Gardens: Pavilions, Studios, Retreats will be displayed in eight galleries encircling The Astor Court, a Chinese garden that is modeled on a 17th-century scholars’ courtyard in the Garden of the Master of the Fishing Nets in Suzhou.  After more than a year during which the Museum hosted several major loan exhibitions in its galleries for Chinese painting, the installation, drawn entirely from the permanent collection, features many of the Metropolitan’s most important paintings.

In conjunction with the exhibition, a variety of programs will be offered. These will be highlighted by a staging in The Astor Court (now sold out) of the classical Chinese opera Peony Pavilion, developed and directed by celebrated composer Tan Dun. The November 30 performance will be simulcast in the Grace Rainey Rogers Auditorium (see Related Programssection below for details).
      
In the densely populated urban centers of China, enclosed gardens have long been an integral part of residential and palace architecture, serving as extensions of living quarters.  The preferred site for hosting literary gatherings, theatrical performances, and 
imaginary outings, gardens were often designed following the same compositional principles used in painting.  And as idealized landscapes, gardens often drew inspiration from literary themes first envisioned by painters.  Not only were painters often recruited to design gardens, but as gardens came to be identified with the tastes and personalities of their residents, artists were also called upon to create idealized paintings of gardens to serve as symbolic portraits intended to reflect the character of the owner. 

Palaces 
Organized thematically, the exhibition will illustrate how garden imagery has remained an abiding source of artistic inspiration and invention.  It will open with a spectacular 18-foot-wide vision of The Palace of Nine Perfections (1691) by Yuan Jiang (active ca. 1680-ca. 1730), presenting an imaginary panorama of a 17th-century palace so grand that the emperor had to ride on horseback between pavilions. Meticulously rendered and sumptuously embellished with rich mineral colors, this screen-like set of scrolls must have been commissioned to adorn the grand reception hall of a wealthy merchant’s home in Yangzhou, the cosmopolitan city where Yuan Jiang worked. Juxtaposed with Yuan Jiang’s fantasy are paintings, an embroidery, and carved red lacquers, depicting auspicious narratives set within palace gardens. In many of these works depictions of young boys at play reflect the perennial wish for male offspring to carry on the imperial line. In each case, an ornate balustrade, imposing garden rock or plant, or finely garbed figures synecdochically indicate the palace setting.

Pavilions and Paradises
Landscape in China has always had a human dimension. Consequently, architecturalelements, particularly pavilions, are a quintessential feature of both Chinese landscape paintings and gardens. In gardens, pavilions identify prime vantage points from which to view the scenery; they also serve as focal points within landscape settings. In painting, the meticulous “ruled-line” renderings of pavilions celebrate historical or literary structures or indicate the fabled dwellings of the immortals—particularly when set within an archaic “blue-and-green” landscape meant to evoke an archaic “golden age.” Yuan Jiang’s gemlike fan painting, Palaces of the Immortals of 1753, is a dazzling example of the longevity of this theme. In Chinese lore, such paradises were imagined as the dwelling places of Daoist immortals. Mortals might stumble upon such magical habitations by losing their way, passing through a grotto or crossing a stream. In Liu Chen and Ruan Zhao Entering the Tiantai Mountains, for example, two men gathering herbs stumble upon a “lost horizon” where time stands still and the residents cease to age. When they seek to return home, they discover that seven generations have passed since their departure. In an actual garden, a moon gate or concealed passage might signal a similar entry point into an alternative world. 

Secluded Temples and Reclusive Retreats 
Buddhist and Daoist temples sometimes functioned as sanctuaries or resorts where harried city dwellers might find spiritual and physical sustenance, partaking of simple vegetarian meals, meditation regimes, lofty conversations, and strolls in the landscape. In the exhibition, Summer Mountains (ca. 1050) by a court painter features several such monastic retreats set within an awesome landscape; the painting’s orderly natural hierarchy, culminating in a towering central peak, was intended as a metaphor for the emperor presiding over a well-governed state. At the opposite extreme of such state-sponsored idylls was the ideal of the hermitage or rustic retreat as an expression of the desire to escape the pressures of politics or commerce. Set in remote corners of the landscape with no view of other dwellings, these imaginary havens embodied yearnings for quietude that were usually satisfied by a stroll in one’s garden. But in times of political turmoil, images of rustic dwellings conveyed the wish for a sanctuary. Serene enough to attract a wild deer or a crane, the childlike naiveté of such paintings as Wang Meng’s (ca. 1308-1385) Simple Retreat, which is featured in the exhibition, will reveal these visions to be unattainable fantasies. 

Literary Gatherings
One of the primary social functions of gardens was to serve as settings for literary gatherings, where likeminded friends might celebrate the season, enjoy music, or view rare antiquities, and then compose poems to commemorate the event. The exhibition will include Elegant Gathering in the Apricot Garden, attributed to the court artist Xie Huan (act. mid-15th century), depicting nine of the most powerful officials in the realm who have gathered to enjoy painting, poetry, and other refined pursuits. Rather than being portrayed wielding emblems of political or military power, these men chose to emphasize their status as scholar-gentlemen, underscoring the fact that, in China, status derived from one’s command of cultural accomplishments. These same men were also responsible for calling a halt to Admiral Zheng He’s voyages of exploration
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