16th-17th century
The Chinese have long prized eroded rocks, especially as focal elements in traditional gardens. This grouping is intended to suggest a quiet corner in an urban garden. Although the best-known garden rocks come from Lake Tai, near Suzhou, a number of other regions also produce handsome specimens. These rocks, for example, originated in Yunnan province in southwest China. The large rock in this grouping is said to have been retrieved from an abandoned Ming-dynasty (1368-1644) garden in Suzhou. Garden rocks are usually arranged to suggest a mountainous landscape, with a tall "host" peak flanked and buttressed by smaller "guest" peaks on either side. The Chinese fascination with rocks might be compared with the modern Western interest in abstract sculpture; although one can read meaning into both rocks and abstract sculpture, each is ultimately appreciated for the beauty of its form. In rocks, connoisseurs typically admire such qualities as attenuated proportions (that recall soaring peaks), weathered surfaces (that suggest great age), forceful profiles (that reflect the grandeur of nature), overlapping layers or planes (that impart depth), and hollows and perforations (that create rhythmic, harmonious patterns). Many of these same characteristics also inform Chinese landscape painting.
sight: H. 170.2 x W. 68.6 cm (67 x 27 in.)
Mao Liqing, Flushing, NY (by 1985), sold; to Harvard University Art Museums, 1985.
Cypress wood with traces of pigment; multiple-block construction
17th centuryJapaneseBronze, on marble plinth
18th centuryFrenchWood with traces of paint and cut gold
14th centuryJapaneseSandstone
15th centuryBronze
19th centuryFrenchStone
2nd-6th centuryRomanTerracotta
5th century BCEGreekMarble
13th-14th centuryItalianBronze with green patina and traces of gilding on left ear and side of face
14th centuryThaired quartzite
2nd millennium BCEEgyptian2 moisture-proof lamps, 2 pairs of sleeping bags, white rope
21st centuryGermanWood
17th centuryGerman