
Quiet Life in a Wooded Glen 林麓幽居圖
<p>This modest cottage nestled at the foot of towering mountains presents a quintessential image of academic retreat from the “dusty” world of material concerns and political instabilities. Its cultured occupant kneels on a platform and plays the zither (<em>qin</em>); a book lies open before him and young servants wait attentively nearby. The luxuriant setting of layered peaks and intertwined trees, as well as the dry, charcoal- like treatment of fibrous and dotted boulders, is imbued with a textural richness. This style is closely associated with Wang Meng, the last of the “Four Great Masters” of the Yuan dynasty.</p> <p>Such a complex, kinetic composition reflects this artist's distinctive contribution to the literati's new use of painting as a vehicle for intellectual and emotional self-expression. This concept was largely kindled by social and political upheavals that accompanied the 14th-century Mongol conquest of China and the establishment of the Yuan dynasty. Wang Meng, who had served the Mongol government as a legal scribe, retired to a mountain hermitage in the turbulent final decades of Yuan rule. He may have executed this painting as a metaphorical self-portrait.</p>
Catalogue
- Year
- 1361
- Dimensions
- 177.8 × 64.2 cm (70 × 25 1/4 in.)
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Artist
- Wang Meng
Artist

Drawing
Wang Meng 王蒙 (Chinese, c. 1308-1385)
Full artist profile →More
More by Wang Meng
Simple Retreat
1360 · Hanging scroll; ink and color on paper
Red Cliffs and Green Valleys
1357 · Hanging scroll; ink on paper
Sparse trees and pavilion
1356 · Fan mounted as an album leaf; ink on silk
Writing Books under the Pine Trees
1303 · Album leaf; ink and color on paper
Record
Verified by WattsOSSource
- Collection
- Art Institute of Chicago
- Source
- aic
- Reference
- View at source
- Status
- verified

