Cloudy Mountains

雲山圖

1130

Mi Youren 米友仁

(Chinese, 1072–1151)
Image: 43.7 x 192.6 cm (17 3/16 x 75 13/16 in.); Overall: 45.5 x 646.8 cm (17 15/16 x 254 5/8 in.)
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Location: not on view

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This scroll is one of the museum’s earliest dated Chinese paintings.

Description

Cloudy Mountains captures the view of a lush and misty riverscape, an impression of Mi Youren’s new environment, painted in a moment of peace.

With the fall of the Northern Song dynasty in 1127 upon the Jurchen’s military invasion, Mi Youren fled south across the Yangzi River. In 1130, he had reached Xinchang in Zhejiang province and thanked his host with this painting for having given him shelter.

Mi Youren was the oldest son of the art critic Mi Fu (1051– 1107); both developed a distinct style of mountain scenery by accumulating wet ink dots that create a hazy atmosphere.
Cloudy Mountains

Cloudy Mountains

1130

Mi Youren

(Chinese, 1072–1151)
China, Southern Song dynasty (1127-1279)

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