Artist:
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Yu Ling
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Title:
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Immortals Beneath the Pine Tree
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Date:
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1653
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Medium:
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Ink and colors on silk
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Dimensions:
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60-15/16 x 36-3/4 in. (154.8 x 93.3 cm)
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Credit Line:
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Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton
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Location:
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Gallery 201
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In a mountainous setting dominated by a venerable pine, five old men gather around a painting of Shoulao, the god of immortality. The inscription on the painting provides the reason for this choice of subject matter. It reads: During the eighth lunar month of the year, 1653, painted to wish old Kui prosperity and longevity on his fiftieth birthday. Xicun (West Village), Yu Ling.
Virtually everything in the painting carries Daoist connotations of longevity, including the pine and rocks, the medicinal fungus tied to the walking staff, the rhinoceros horn cup, and the double gourd held by two of the men containing no doubt the elixir of immortality. Within the painting being viewed, Shoulao, Immortal of the Southern Pole, is accompanied by cranes, pine, and deer, all standard metaphors for long life.
The style of Yu Ling's painting is that of the Zhe school of artists that flourished in the Zhejiang city of Hangzhou during much of Ming. Not surprisingly, Yu Ling is recorded as having spent most of his career working in that same city.
Artist/Creator(s)
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Name:
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Ling, Yu
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Nationality:
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Chinese
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Life Dates:
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active late 17th century
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Object Description
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Inscriptions:
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untranslated inscription and 2 seals, ULC
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Classification:
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Paintings
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Physical Description:
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5 men unrolling and viewing a hanging scroll in an outdoor setting; man at R holds a small vessel
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Creation Place:
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Asia, China, , ,
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Accession #:
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2001.139.5
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Owner:
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The Minneapolis Institute of Arts
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