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A 14th-century rubbing of a painting from the Song dynasty is the earliest known depiction of Wang with geese. [104] A well-known painting, Wang Xizhi Watching Geese by Qian Xuan, was painted c. 1295 and is housed in the Metropolitan Museum of Art. [107]
Danqing painting, A section of Wang Ximeng's A Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains (千里江山圖). Danqing painting, Complete Wang Ximeng's A Thousand Li of Rivers and Mountains. Danqing painting, Qian Xuan's Wang Xizhi Watching Geese (王羲之觀鵝圖). Danqing painting, Gu Kaizhi's Nymph of the Luo River (洛神賦).
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Calligrapher and goose-enthusiast Wang Xizhi viewing geese (鵝), by Qian Xuan, 1250-1300. The Chinese language typically distinguishes between domestic and wild geese, with separate words and characters for each. The common character for "wild goose" is 鴈 (with variant form 雁, both are yàn in Hanyu Pinyin, *ngan4 in Tang). The elements ...
Qian Xuan (simplified Chinese: 钱选; traditional Chinese: 錢選; pinyin: Qián Xuǎn; Wade–Giles: Ch'ien Hsüan; 1235–1305), courtesy name Shun Ju (舜举), pseudonyms Yu Tan (玉潭, "Jade Pool"), Xi Lanweng (习嬾翁), and Zha Chuanweng (霅川翁), was a Chinese painter from Huzhou (湖州), the present day Wuxing District in Zhejiang. [1]
Wang Xizhi watching geese; by Qian Xuan; 1235 – before 1307; handscroll (ink, color and gold on paper); Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City) The eight hosts of Deva, Naga and Yakshi; 1454; hanging scroll, ink and color on silk; dimensions of the painting: 140.2 × 78.8 cm; Cleveland Museum of Art
Wang Xizhi watching geese; by Qian Xuan; 1235-before 1307; handscroll (ink, color and gold on paper); 9 1 ⁄ 8 x 36 1 ⁄ 2 in.; Metropolitan Museum of Art. The conceptual separation of arts and decorative arts or crafts that have often dominated in Europe and the US is not shared by all other cultures.
The Orchid Pavilion Gathering of 42 literati included Xie An and Sun Chuo [4] and Wang Pin-Chih at the Orchid Pavilion (Lanting) on Mount Kuaiji just south of Kuaiji (present-day Shaoxing in Zhejiang), during the Spring Purification Festival, on the third day of the third month, to compose poems and drink huangjiu.