A Scholar Contemplating a Waterfall

Minneapolis Institute of Art

A Scholar Contemplating a Waterfall

Zhang Lu

Date
c. 1525
Medium
Hanging scroll, ink and light colors on silk
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

A scholar, accompanied by his servant carrying his books, pauses to contemplate a waterfall as it cascades down a mountain in the distance. This painting encapsulates the eremitic theme in traditional Chinese painting, in which nature and solitude are celebrated as aims of an elevated, scholarly life. The scene also evokes certain religious themes: the flowing water represents the essence of the otherworldly or immortal, embodying Daoist philosophy, which posits that the meaning of life can be sensed but not fully understood or translated into language. The painter Zhang Lu adopted and developed the so-called ax-cut-like brushstrokes, seen here in the depiction of the rocks that are outlined with bold dark lines and washed with broad strokes of lighter ink. China, Asia

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