A Prunus in the Moonlight

Cleveland Museum of Art

A Prunus in the Moonlight

Wang Mian

Date
1300s
Medium
Hanging scroll; ink on silk
Culture
China, Yuan dynasty (1271-1368)
Department
Chinese Art
Institution
Cleveland Museum of Art

The plum flourishes in the mild climate of the south, and it was not before the Six Dynasties period (220– 589 CE) that the motif began to be appreciated by southern artists, many of whom had emigrated from the north. Wang Mian from Zhejiang province had failed the civil and military service examinations and later rejected appointments under the Mongol government. Instead, he chose to return home, making a living by selling plum paintings. Few of Wang’s works have survived, but they demonstrate that by his time the ink-plum ( momei ) genre was fully developed. The painting portrays the plum in the nighttime, as indicated by the tint of the background and the presence of the moon.

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