dated early autumn 1892
A royal prince, Yi Ha-ŭng was the father of King Ko-chong (r. 1864-1906), the last king of the Chosŏn dynasty (1392-1910). In addition to being an enlightened statesman, Yi was an accomplished painter and calligrapher who was unsurpassed in his mastery of orchid painting. Frequently depicted in literati paintings alongside rocks and boulders, the orchid appears graceful, elegant, and unaffected by its rough surroundings. The orchids and rocks in Yi's paintings typically enter the composition at dramatic angles and generally occupy only one corner or one side of a composition. Korean folding screens often have six panels, like those painted in Japan; more characteristically, however, Korean screens boast eight, ten, or even twelve panels. In some cases, a Korean screen may feature a single, unified composition that spreads across all its panels; in other instances--such as this one--each panel is conceived as an individual painting. The ten separate paintings that compose this screen are grouped in four pairs, with an individual composition mounted on the first and last panels of the screen. Each of the four pairs in the middle can be read as a single composition or as two separate paintings. Such visual double entendres held a special allure for Korean literati artists of the nineteenth and early twentieth century. This screen's large size and its royal authorship indicate that it was painted for one of the royal palaces. Each painting bears a personal seal of the artist, rather than a seal with the artist's name or sobriquet. For example, the seal in the lower right corner of the ninth panel (second from the left) translates into the aphorism "The best time to view a flower is when it is half open." The other nine personal seal impressions vary from idiomatic phrases to humorous remarks on Daoism and Buddhism. In the very last panel at the far left, however, Yi Ha-ŭng signs and impresses two of his artist's seals to the painting, making the authorship of this important screen indisputable. His inscription translates as, "Done by the seventy-three-year-old old man Sŏk-p'a in the early autumn of 1892."
paintings proper: H. 145.5 x W. 29 cm (57 5/16 x 11 7/16 in.) screen mounting: H. 225 x W. 459.6 cm (88 9/16 x 180 15/16 in.)
[Kang Collection, New York (2001)] sold; to Harvard University Art Museums, 2001.
One of a set of four hanging scrolls; ink on silk; with signature reading "P'al-ship no-sŏk-in chak" followed by two seals of the artist reading "Tae Wŏn Kun Chang" and "Sŏk P'a"; and with an additional seal of the artist at the far left reading "Tam Tam Ryu Su Ŭi"
19th centuryKoreanEight-panel folding screen; ink and colors on paper
19th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink and slight color on paper; with inscription, signature, and three seals of the artist
19th-20th centuryKoreanEight-panel folding screen; ink, gold, and bright colors on silk
18th-19th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink on paper; with artist's signature
19th centuryKoreanEight-panel folding screen; ink on sky-blue tinted paper; each of the eight paintings with artist's inscription followed by a signature reading "Soho" (Chinese, "Xiaohu"); the first (i.e., far right) painting also with a signature of the artist reading "Kim Ŭng-wŏn"; each inscription preceded by an elongated elliptical red seal and each signature followed by two red seals, all the seals now virtually obliterated through abrasion
19th-20th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink on silk satin; with signature of the artist reading "So-ho Ke-sa Kim Ŭng-wŏn chak"; with four seals of the artist
19th-20th centuryKoreanFolding album leaf mounted as a hanging scroll (from an album of sixteen leaves); ink on paper; with an inscription by the artist; with one seal of the artist
19th centuryKoreanLarge album leaf now framed and glazed; ink and slight color on silk; with one seal, perhaps a seal of the artist
19th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink on paper; with two seals of the artist
19th centuryKoreanSection of a hanging scroll mounted on a panel and framed; ink and colors on paper
18th-19th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink and colors on paper; with square, red, intaglio seal impression reading "Cho Chung-muk in"
19th centuryKorean