19th century
Painted with ink and colored pigments on paper, this magnificent eight-panel folding screen boasts a continuous scene of a lotus pond with tall, luxuriant stalks of lotus flowers, buds, and leaves interspersed with pairs of birds, fish, and other aquatic creatures. Each individual panel depicts clusters of lotus plants emerging from the bottom of a pond – white lotus blossoms and buds, their petals tinged with a touch of pink at the tips, are shown in various stages of growth atop long, thin stems; large, broad lotus leaves painted in rich hues of blue, green, or golden brown turn and curl in every direction. Each panel also includes at least one pair of birds or fish: Mandarin ducks, magpies, and kingfishers fly above or perch on the lotuses; waterfowl, fish, and a crab and shrimp appear below, as if standing in or lying beneath the water of the pond. Although the vertical panels may be viewed somewhat satisfyingly as individual compositions, the continuous lotus imagery elegantly undulates across each panel to create a visually stunning panorama. This decorated screen is rife with auspicious symbolism. Wishes for marital bliss are conveyed by the pairs of birds and fish, while individual animals such as the crab, magpie, and shrimp, whose names in Chinese and Korean are reminiscent of words of good fortune, represent wishes for a life full of harmony, happiness, longevity, and prosperity. Whereas in the Buddhist and Confucian traditions, the lotus is an emblem of purity and the upright Confucian scholar, in the folk art tradition, the lotus pod’s abundance of seeds signify fecundity, and the word for lotus in both Chinese and Korean (Ch. lian, K. yŏn) is homonymous with the word for “continuity,” thereby suggesting a wish for the continuation of the family through the birth of many sons. Painted folded screens were displayed in the rooms of virtually every household in Chosŏn-period Korea, from the royal palace to the homes of aristocratic government officials and commoners. As functioning pieces of furniture, screens divided rooms, provided privacy, and deflected drafts. As works of folk art, they decorated a living space and offered hope for good fortune through their auspicious symbolism. The elegant composition, skillful painting, rich materials, and relatively tall proportions of this screen of lotuses and birds suggest that it was likely commissioned by a relatively wealthy patron for an upper class residence.
Each panel painting proper: H. 94.8 x W. 41.8 cm (37 5/16 x 16 7/16 in.) Screen overall with mounting and wooden frame: H. 162.2 x W. 467.2 cm (63 7/8 x 183 15/16 in.)
Private Collection, Korea (until 1968), by gift; to Private Collection, California (1968-2012), sold; [through Kang Collection, New York]; to Harvard Art Museums, 2013.
Large album leaf now framed and glazed; ink and slight color on silk; with one seal, perhaps a seal of the artist
19th centuryKoreanEight-panel folding screen; ink and color on paper
19th centuryKoreanOne of two vertical panels mounted as hanging scrolls, the panels from a folding screen and probably from a set of eight; ink and colors on paper
19th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink on silk; with inscription by the artist; with artist's signature reading "Hae-kang Kim Kyu-chin"; with three seals of the artist
19th-20th centuryKoreanFolding album leaf (from an album of sixteen leaves) mounted as a hanging scroll; ink on paper, with notation reading "Maedoin chak" (in Chinese, "Meidaoren zuo"), indicating that the painting is in the manner of Wu Zhen; with a square, red, relief seal of the artist redading "Yu Hyang Sŭp In"
19th centuryKoreanFour-panel folding screen; ink on paper; with signature reading "Hyŏn-chŏng Cho Kwang-kuk"; with seals reading "Hyŏn Chŏng" and "Cho Kwang Kuk"
19th centuryKoreanTwo-panel folding screen; ink on paper; with inscription, signature, and three seals of the artist
19th-20th centuryKoreanSection of a hanging scroll mounted on a panel and framed; ink and colors on paper
18th-19th centuryKoreanSketch, underdrawing, or preliminary drawing for a Buddhist painting, now framed; ink and light colors on paper
18th-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 arist
19th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink and slight color on paper; with signature reading "Roi-roi to-in"; with seal of the artist
19th-20th centuryKoreanHanging scroll; ink and colors on paper; with square, red, intaglio seal impression reading "Cho Chung-muk in" and with square, red, relief seal impression reading "Un-kye"
19th centuryKorean