mid 18th century
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. Representing bamboo through the four seasons, this eight-panel screen is meant to be "read" by the viewer from right to left. The first two paintings, at the far right, depict newly sprung shoots and fresh stalks of bamboo emerging from the ground in spring. The next pair of images display lush, hearty stalks of bamboo enduring the strong winds and warm sun of summer. The relative sparseness, dry ink tones, and overlapping mist visible in the next two paintings convey characteristics of the autumn months. The last pair of images, at the far left, which depict old, thick, broken stalks of bamboo with hints of new stalks in one painting and bamboo branches heavily laden with snow in the other, complete the cycle with the winter season. Though the paintings lack inscriptions and signatures, two red, square seal impressions at the upper left corner of the far--left panel identify two sobriquets of the artist Yu Tŏk-chang (1675-1765) and thus reveal the creator of this masterful work of art. A follower of the famous Korean bamboo-painting master Yi Chŏng (1541-1622), Yu Tŏk-chang was one of the most prominent literati artists of the Chosŏn dynasty (1392-1910). Like their Koryŏ-dynasty (918-1392) predecessors, both Yi and Yu took inspiration from the work of Chinese literati painters of the Song (960-1279) and Yuan (1279-1368) dynasties. Their paintings thus tend to resemble literati paintings by early Chinese masters, rather than works produced by their Chinese contemporaries. In this screen, however, Yu departs from the Chinese model and exhibits the distinctly Korean style of bamboo painting he learned from Yi Chŏng: the two tones of ink used to starkly distinguish fore-and background subjects; the angular mists that abruptly interrupt a scene; and the thick stumps of bamboo with sharp, broken edges. Bamboo painting was extremely popular among the literati, perhaps because of its association with the so-called Four Gentlemen--plum blossoms, orchids, chrysanthemums, and bamboo. All four of these botanical subjects, which readily lend themselves to depiction with calligraphic brushwork, are said to embody the virtues to which Confucian scholars aspired, such as integrity, purity, and strength in the face of adversity. So important was the ability to paint bamboo that in the fifteenth century it outranked even landscape painting in the official examinations for Korea's royal painting academy.
Overall mounting: H. 165 x W. 513.2 cm (64 15/16 x 202 1/16 in.) paintings proper: H. 81.4 x W. 48.8 cm (32 1/16 x 19 3/16 in.)
[Kang Collection, New York (2000)] sold; to Harvard University Art Museums, 2000.
Hanging scroll; ink and light colors on silk; with signature of the artist reading "So-chung-hwa Sŏ-am sa"
18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf; ink on dark brown paper
17th-18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf mounted as a hanging scroll; ink and light colors on paper; with seals of the artist reading "Hyŏn Chae" and "Yi Suk"
18th centuryKoreanFolding album leaf mounted flat and framed; ink on paper; with an inscription by the artist; with one square, red, relief seal of the artist reading "Kyŏng-am"
18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf; ink on dark brown paper
17th-18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf; ink and light colors on silk
18th centuryKoreanFragment of a hanging scroll mounted on a panel and framed; ink and colors on silk
18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf mounted as a hanging scroll; ink on paper; with signature purportedly of the artist reading "Wŏn-paek"; with seal purportedly of the artist reading "Wŏn-paek"
18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf; ink and slight color on silk
17th-18th centuryKoreanSection of a hanging scroll mounted on a panel and framed; ink and colors on paper
18th-19th centuryKoreanFolding album leaf mounted as a hanging scroll; ink on paper; with signature reading "Chuk-sol"; with three seals of the artist
17th-18th centuryKoreanAlbum leaf; ink on paper
18th centuryKorean