Elephant, Horse, and Hare

Description

Min Zhen, who was orphaned at age 12 and developed an eccentric personality, was trained by Tang Yin (1682–1756), a writer, playwright, and superintendent of the imperial porcelain workshops in Jingdezhen. The connection to him may have enabled Min to stay in Beijing for a decade from around 1773. It is not clear whether he ever resided in Yangzhou, but his style is in many instances reminiscent of that of Yangzhou artist Huang Shen.

The album was painted for the artist's friend Dailili Shanren in exchange for a scholar’s stone. The paintings demonstrate Min Zhen’s versatility and mature style in the last years of his life. This leaf, Elephant, Horse, and Hare, seems to exhibit a contest, and may be associated with the recipient’s affinity to Buddhism (elephant), Confucianism (horse), and Daoism (hare).

Provenance

Daili Shanren 戴笠山人 [active late 1700s] (1788–?); Ni Yun 倪耘 [d. 1864]; Yan Shiqing 顏世清 [1873–1929]; Xu Xiaopu 徐小圃 [1887–1961]; Ding Nianxian 丁念先 [1906–1969] (c. mid-1900s); (Eskenazi Ltd., London, England, sold to the Cleveland Museum of Art) (?–1985); The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1985–)

Elephant, Horse, and Hare

Min Zhen

1788

Accession Number

1985.71.1

Medium

album leaf, ink on paper

Dimensions

Overall single page: 36.8 x 22.1 cm (14 1/2 x 8 11/16 in.); Painting: 29 x 18.4 cm (11 7/16 x 7 1/4 in.)

Classification

Painting

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

John L. Severance Fund