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Detail of the Handscroll "Joys of the Fisherman" by Wang Fu in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, April 2009

Detail of the Handscroll "Joys of the Fisherman" by Wang Fu in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, April 2009
Artist
Wang Fu (Chinese, 1362–1416)

Title/Object Name
Joys of the Fisherman

Culture
China

Period
Ming dynasty (1368–1644)

Date
ca. 1410

Medium
Handscroll; ink on paper

Dimensions
Image: 10 5/8 x 22 ft. 7 1/8 in. (27 x 688.7 cm) Overall with mounting: 10 15/16 in. x 38 ft. 3 11/16 in. (27.8 x 1167.6 cm)

Credit Line
Ex coll.: C. C. Wang Family, Edward Elliott Family Collection, Purchase, The Dillon Fund Gift, 1982

Accession Number
1982.2.3


Text from: www.metmuseum.org/Works_of_Art/collection_database/asian_...

and

A twelfth-century couplet inscribed on the wall of a tavern characterized the lives of the fisherman and the scholar-official:
Right and wrong reach not where men fish;
Glory and disgrace dog the official riding his horse.

To painters living in the tumultuous days of the late Yuan and early Ming dynasties, the theme of the fisherman symbolized a perfect escape from their strife-torn world.

Wang Fu, a fellow townsman of Ni Zan (1306-1374), returned to Wuxi in 1401, after twenty years of exile at the desolate northern outpost of Datong, Shanxi Province; like Ni Zan, he had been a wanderer in his native land. In this long scroll Wang echoes Wu Zhen’s (1280-1354) treatment of the fisherman theme. Poised between descriptive realism and calligraphic abstraction, Wang’s painting exemplifies the Ming- and Qing- dynasty scholar-artists’ practice of expressing themselves through the brush idioms of the Song and Yuan masters.

Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art label.

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