Streams and Mountains without End: Landscape Traditions of China

26 August 2017–18 August 2019

Exhibition Overview

About a thousand years ago, the Chinese landscape painter Guo Xi posed the question, "In what does a gentleman's love of landscape consist?" This question is at the heart of the exhibition, which explores the many uses of landscape in the Chinese visual arts.

This exhibition, which showcases more than 120 Chinese landscape paintings in four rotations, offers insights into the tradition, revealing distinctions between types of landscape that might not be obvious at first glance. What appears to be a simple mountain dwelling, for example, turns out to be the villa of the painter's friend, encoding a wish for his happy retirement. Similarly, what seems at first to be a simple study in dry brushwork turns out to be an homage to an old master, an expression of reverence for what has come before.

Drawn primarily from The Met's holdings and supplemented by a dozen private loans, the presentation is augmented by decorative art objects with landscape themes.

(Photo: Buddhist Temples amid Autumn Mountains, After Yan Wengui (Chinese, 970–1030), 14th century, Handscroll; ink and pale color on silk,
Image: 12 7/8 in. × 10 ft. 6 1/2 in. (32.7 × 321.3 cm), Purchase, The Dillon Fund Gift, 1983)

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