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After the Rain

Artist (Chinese, 1428 - 1500)
Place of OriginChina
Date1428 - 1500
DynastyMing dynasty (1368 -1644)
MaterialsInk on paper
DimensionsH. 50 in x W. 20 1/4 in, H. 127 cm x W. 51.4 cm (image); H. 84 1/2 in x W. 25 1/8 in, H. 214.6 cm x W. 63.8 cm (overall)
Credit LineMuseum purchase
Object numberB68D6
DepartmentChinese Art
ClassificationsPainting
On View
Not on view
SignedArtist signature: Baisha 白沙。 Seal: 石齋 (白文方印)。
Inscribed蒼山收雨鵓鳩靈, 曉向松花對曉睛。風日醉花花醉鳥, 竹門啼過兩三聲。 Green mountains attract cranes and waterfowl. Amidst whirling morning rain, river waves pound at the dawning sun. Flowers blow dizzily in morning wind, enticing birds to come. Laughing bamboo and crowing birds are in harmony with it all.
More Information

明陳獻章草書《喜晴》詩

The philosopher, educator, poet, and calligrapher Chen Xianzhang, who lived in the mountains, often ran out of brushes for writing, so he used thatch grass instead of animal hair. As a result, his brushwork is generally characterized by bold sweeping strokes with rough edges and "flying white" dryness (see detail). After the Rain is a poem that describes the birds happily singing in the wind among flowers outside the window right after the rain stopped.

The Chinese transcription below corresponds to the calligraphy, which reads from top to bottom and right to left:

蒼山收雨鵓鳩靈

曉雨松花對曉晴

風日醉花花醉鳥

竹門啼過两三聲


Curator's voice:
Only being familiar with his smaller-scale works, when I saw After the Rain I wanted to know how this work in a large hanging scroll format compared to his more typical handscrolls. After some research, I found two pieces that stylistically link to After the Rain. The first connecting piece was located in the Shanghai Museum's collection and the second in the Guangdong Provincial Museum. The three works share similar characteristics in both style and execution.

After the Rain
Abdur Rahman Chughtai
1930-1960
Inviting the Moon with a Wine Cup
Chen Xiang
approx. 1800-1900
Orchid
Chen Peng
approx. 1700-1800
Album of Bamboo Paintings
Chen Hao
1875 - 1925
Reflections in a Redwood Glen
John Youngfu Chen
2006
Calligraphy in Semicursive Script (Xingshu)
Chen Gongyin
Approx. 1651 - 1700
Crowing Rooster and Green Prunus
Chen Dayu
1994 or earlier
Landscape
Xiao Chen
probably 1675