Featured by the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
The majestic Riverbank is a rare and important
survivor from the formative days of Chinese landscape painting. This
image of a scholar's retreat nestled in a windswept mountain defile
offers a window onto the pivotal but mysterious tenth century, when
images of nature rose to prominence, replacing pictures of the human
figure as the dominant form of pictorial expression for ambitious
artists. Only a handful of paintings survive from this period, but they,
along with textual evidence, indicate that it was a time of epochal
transformation, when landscape painting made a quantum leap in scale,
sophistication, and ambition. Riverbank is a key piece of evidence of this revolution.
The painting's central scene takes place in a small waterside
pavilion, where a scholar sits gazing at the turbulent surface of a
river. Behind him, his wife and two children are framed against a screen
of cursive calligraphy. In a complex of buildings that extends back
from the pavilion, figures busily engage in housework. Weary travelers
approach the buildings on a path, completing the final stage of their
journey as a powerful wind arises, bending the trees around them from
right to left. Towering and tortuous mountain forms jut and twist with
violent force as waterfalls plunge to the river below. At the center of
this awesome vision of nature stands the scholar's retreat, a haven of
peace and respite from the world beyond its walls.
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