Ink Cake with Wang Ziqiao

Description

Ink cakes were dissolved with water to be used for writing and painting. This ink cake depicts the immortal Wang Ziqiao riding a crane and playing a sheng (wind instrument with reeds). Legend says that he was a prince who became a Daoist immortal.

The design was likely borrowed from an illustrated Ming dynasty book on Daoist immortals printed in Anhui, the Liexian Quanzhuan. Ink cakes using Fang Yulu’s name, a famous ink maker in Huizhou, Anhui province, may just as well be products of followers who aspired to profit from his fame. His greatest local rival was his former mentor Cheng Dayue (1541–after 1610).

Provenance

Henry W. Kent [1866–1948], given to the Cleveland Museum of Art (?–1942); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1942–)

Ink Cake with Wang Ziqiao

Fang Yulu

c. 1600s

Accession Number

1942.233

Medium

Molded ink and gold pigment

Dimensions

Diameter: 5.4 cm (2 1/8 in.)

Classification

Miscellaneous

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Henry W. Kent