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Art of Asia
Course: Art of Asia > Unit 2
Lesson 10: Tang dynasty (618–907)- Tang dynasty (618–907), an introduction
- An Introduction to the Tang dynasty (618–906)
- A Tang silk brocade
- Tang Yue ware
- Tomb figurines, Tang dynasty
- Tomb figures of a man and woman on horseback
- Tomb figure of a groom
- Stele of the Buddha Maitreya
- Dancer
- Camel
- Central Asian wine peddler
- Chinese Buddhist cave shrines
- Mogao caves at Dunhuang
- Jataka tales at Dunhuang
- Dunhuang Historical Art, Cave 323
- A silk painting of sacred Buddhist images from Dunhuang
- The paintings and manuscripts from cave 17 at Mogao (1 of 2)
- The paintings and manuscripts from cave 17 at Mogao (2 of 2)
- Hong Bian, the monk in the Library Cave, Mogao
- Zhou Fang, Ladies Wearing Flowers in Their Hair
- Taoism in the Tang and Song dynasties
- Admonitions Scroll, attributed to Gu Kaizhi
- Han Gan, Night-Shining White
- Zither (qin) inscribed with the name “Dragon’s Moan”
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Admonitions Scroll, attributed to Gu Kaizhi
By The British Museum
The Admonitions of the Instructress to the Court Ladies is an eighth-century copy of the earliest and finest painting attributed to Gu Kaizhi (about 345–406). It illustrates a political parody written by Zhang Hua (about 232–300). The parody takes a moralizing tone, attacking the excessive behavior of an empress. The protagonist is the court instructress who guides the ladies of the imperial harem on correct behavior.
In total, nine scenes were depicted on this scroll, but it is now incomplete; the first two scenes are missing, as well as the text to the first scene.
The handscroll has a complex, horizontal arrangement. Nine scenes illustrate the text, beginning from the right. There may have been three additional scenes and texts at the beginning of the scroll, which are now missing. It was re-mounted during the reign of the Qianlong emperor (r. 1736–95) as he greatly admired it. It was mounted in its current format at the British Museum in 1914, to preserve it more safely.
None of Gu Kaizhi’s original works has survived, but he has still acquired a legendary status, both as a painter and as a writer on Chinese painting. He was given extensive coverage in the dynastic histories and the seminal text on painting, Li-dai ming-hua ji written by Zhang Yanyuan (about 847). Gu Kaizhi’s reputation was probably helped by anecdotes about his eccentricity; he was said to have been perfect in ‘painting, literary composition and foolishness’.
This painting has been executed in a fine linear style that is typical of fourth-century figure painting. Similar pictorial motifs have been discovered in contemporary tombs. Texts describe Gu Kaizhi as having painted in this manner. The inscriptions and seals on this scroll date back to the eighth century, when this copy of Gu’s original was probably painted.
Before its arrival at the British Museum in 1903, the scroll passed through many hands. The history of the painting can be ascertained through the seals and inscriptions, beginning with the eighth-century seal of the Hongwen guan, a division of the Han-lin Academy.
The painting was subsequently in the collections of well-known connoisseurs who added their own seals and inscriptions, before ending up in the imperial collection during the reign of the Qianlong emperor (1736-96).
© The Trustees of the British Museum
Additional resources:
Farrer, The brush dances and the ink sings: Chinese paintings and calligraphy from the British Museum (Hayward Gallery, London, 1990)
Suzuki (ed.), Comprehensive illustrated catalogue of Chinese painting (University of Tokyo Press, 1982)
Rawson (ed.), The British Museum book of Chinese art (London, The British Museum Press, 1992)
Gray, Admonitions of the instructress (London, The British Museum Press, 1966)
M.A. Lewis, China between Empires: The Northern and Southern Dynasties (Boston, 2009)
M.A. Lewis, China’s Cosmopolitan Empire: The Tang Dynasty (Boston, 2009)
McCausland, First Masterpiece of Chinese Painting: The Admonitions Scroll (London, The British Museum Press, 2003)
McCausland (ed.), Gu Kaizhi and the Admonitions Scroll (London, The British Museum Press, 2003)
R.M. Barnhart, Three Thousand Years of Chinese Painting (New Haven, Yale University Press, 2002)
Zhongshi, Chinese Calligraphy (New Haven, Yale University Press, 2008)
Ebrey, The Cambridge Illustrated History of China (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1999)