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University of California Press

Repentant Monk

Illusion and Disillusion in the Art of Chen Hongshou

by Julia M White (Editor)
Price: $60.00 / £50.00
Publication Date: Oct 2017
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 192
ISBN: 9780520294332
Trim Size: 8.25 x 11.5
Illustrations: 135 color images

About the Book

Repentant Monk: Illusion and Disillusion in the Art of Chen Hongshou is the first U.S. exhibition focusing solely on Chen Hongshou (1599–1652), a major figure in Chinese painting. Chen has long been regarded as one of the most visually exciting artists of his time as evidenced in this exhibition by a careful selection of his best extant work including figure, landscape, and bird and flower paintings drawn from collections world-wide. Chen’s iconic manner of painting figures in the styles of ancient masters lends an aura of antiquity to his work which is equally charged by distinct expressions of irony, humor, and pathos. In his landscape paintings we recognize his vast knowledge of past traditions while in his bird and flower paintings we see a remarkable freshness and modernity that has tremendous popular appeal.
 
Repentant Monk addresses the need for a greater historical understanding of this artist’s work and breadth of paintings made during the transitional period of the late Ming and early Qing dynasties (early to mid- seventeenth century). The title refers to the sobriquet that Chen adopted in 1646, and goes to the heart of the exhibition content. Chen used "Repentant Monk" (Hui Seng) in seals and signature for a short period of time but his paintings reflected his personal state of mind throughout his later period. His withdrawal from society and adoption of this name make public both his disappointment with the Ming as well as his own regret at surviving and carrying on into the new Qing dynasty rather than following other loyalists to death by their own hands. The exhibition will include work from major museums worldwide and includes strategic loans such as Elegant Gathering (1646–47) from the Shanghai Museum, Scenes from the Life of Tao Yuanming (1650) from the Honolulu Museum of Art,  and The Mountain of Five Cataracts (1624) from The Cleveland Museum of Art. The catalogue includes an introduction by exhibition curator Julia M. White with essays by Tamara Bentley, Shi-yee Liu, Richard Vinograd, Hiromitsu Kobayashi, and Patricia Berger. Transcriptions and translations are compiled by Julia Jaw.
 
Published in association with The Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA).
 
Exhibition dates:
October 25, 2017–January 28, 2018

About the Author

Julia White is senior curator for Asian Art at Berkeley Museum of Art Pacific Film Archive. She is the author of Beauty Revealed: Images of Women in Qing Dynasty Chinese Painting.

Table of Contents

Director’s Foreword
Lawrence Rinder
Acknowledgments
Julia M. White

Introduction
Repentant Monk: Illusion and Disillusion in the Art of Chen Hongshou
Julia M. White

One
Enigma and Intertextuality: Creative Response to Adversity
Tamara H. Bentley

Two
Printed Beauties
Hiromitsu Kobayashi

Three
Visions of the Occult in Early Figure Painting
Shi-yee Liu

Four
Living in a World of Regret: Buddhist Paintings
Patricia Berger

Five
Composite Identities: Portraits
Richard Vinograd

Catalogue
Appendix
Inscriptions and Documentation
Julia Jaw
Selected Bibliography
Index