Garden of the Inept Administrator
| Support Type: | Paper |
| Paint Type: | Ink |
| Current Location: | Metropolitan Museum of Art |
| Location History: | Gift of Douglas Dillon, 1979 |
Garden of the Inept Administrator depicts a serene garden scene. The entire artwork is an album composed of eight leaves, with poems inscribed on facing leaves. In this leaf, sitting in a pavilion next to a patch of bamboo, two gentlemen observe a crane, an animal that symbolises longevity in Chinese painting. Next to them lies a boardwalk that leads into the courtyard house in which they reside. Painted in 1551, this artwork was created by Wen Zhengming, a Chinese artist from the Ming Dynasty (1368 - 1644). It is one of many depictions of a scholar’s garden, a popular subject in Chinese painting, where natural and artificial are delicately balanced, showing a carefully curated piece of wilderness. In the painting, Wen depicts the garden in which he was given a studio at. Being the namesake of the painting, the Garden of the Inept Administrator (Zhuozhengyuan) is an historical garden in Suzhou that still exists today, built by government official Wang Xianchen during Wen’s time. The artist, Wen Zhengming, is considered the leader of Wu School painting, which flourished during the sixteenth century. Born in a family of scholars, Wen is renowned for his mastery over a variety of painting styles, as well as his proficiency in calligraphy. This is evident in his artwork Garden of the Inept Administrator, where Wen achieves the harmonious integration of the “three perfection”, which consists of the arts of poetry, painting, and calligraphy.
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