Yuan dynasty Wu Zhen (1280-1354)
Twin Pines
- Hanging scroll, ink on silk
- 180.1 x 111.4 cm
Wu Zhen was a native of Jiaxing in Zhejiang who went by the style name Zhonggui and the sobriquet Meihuadaoren. As a youth, he studied under Liu Tianji and became learned in Daoism and Buddhism. He vowed to remain in reclusion and therefore never desired public attention or office.
He began to learn painting sometime during the Dade era (1297-1307). In his early period, Wu often copied the works of famous Five Dynasties and Northern Song landscape painting masters as Dong Yuan, Juran, Li Cheng, and Guo Xi. After the age of 50, his style gradually matured. Wu, however, rarely associated with other scholars, so few people knew about his painting. Only the middle of the Ming dynasty when such scholar-painters as Shen Zhou (1427-1509) and Wen Zhengming (1470-1559) promoted Wu's painting did aspects of his life come to light. He then came to be praised along with Huang Gongwang (1269-1354), Ni Zan (1301-1374), and Wang Meng (1308-1385) as one of thee Four Masters of the Yuan .
The 1328 date on this painting indicates it was done by Wu at the age of 48, making it his earliest surviving work. The calligraphy in his inscription also somewhat differs from that appeared on later works. The title is based on that given in the Qing dynasty imperial catalogue (Shiqubaoji ), but the trees shown are actually cypresses, not pines. In An Qh'i 'sMoyuanhuiguan (Classification of Works Viewed), he recorded the work as "Level Distance of Twin Cypresses," which appears to be a much more appropriate title.
In "Eulogy on Auspicious Cypresses" by Yuan Jue (1266-1327), he mentioned that in the first lunar month of 1326, the majestic cypresses were reportedly planted by the ancient Daoist master Lu in the Xuanmiao Abbey located in Siming (modern-day Yinxian, Zhejiang). The trees were said to suddenly splay out at the top, forming an unusual shape like a phoenix coronet. People had long praised the sight, considering it an auspicious omen. Two years after Yuan Jue's record, Wu Zhen did this work for the Daoist Zhang Shanyuan of the Xuanmiao Abbey. Perhaps, then, the cypresses in this painting were the auspicious ones at that Daoist abbey.
The composition here takes the level distance approach to space found in the Li Cheng and Guo Xi's school of painting. The ancient cypresses stand tall and majestic in the foreground as a small stream winds its way in the area viewed between the tree trunks . On either side of the banks are rolling hills complemented by houses at the edge of a forest . The cypress trees were rendered equally with outlining and washes. In this fine depiction, the branches and trunks are elegant and exacting with a majestic air to them. In the background, the rolling hills and mountains were mostly done using washes of light ink. Between the fore-and background is an expanse of space that successfully creates a subtle scene of peace and tranquility.