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Pan Lang (Han Rō)

Shikibu Terutadamid-1500s

The Cleveland Museum of Art

The Cleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, United States

These three fan-shaped paintings, now mounted as individual hanging scrolls, were once part of a set of 20 mounted on a folding screen. They portray the Chinese subjects, from left to right, of the scholar-official Pan Lang, Hanshan reciting his poetry to Shide, and a duck in flight above reeds. Pan Lang grew so fond of the mountain in his place of exile that when he was ordered back to the capital, he rode backward on his donkey so he could see it until it receded into the distance. Hanshan and Shide worked in the kitchen of a Zen monastery, but were actually reincarnations of the bodhisattvas Manjushri and Samantabhadra. The combination of a mandarin duck and reeds may have signified a level of attainment in Chinese civil service exams. All three paintings bear the seal of the Kantobased artist Shikibu Terutada. Shikibu was familiar with Kano school painting, but he also modeled his early style after that of the prominent Kanto-based Kenkō Shōkei (active about 1470–after 1523).

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  • Title: Pan Lang (Han Rō)
  • Creator: Shikibu Terutada (Japanese, active mid-1500s)
  • Date Created: mid-1500s
  • Physical Dimensions: Painting: 25 x 50 cm (9 13/16 x 19 11/16 in.); Mounted: 99.4 x 65.5 cm (39 1/8 x 25 13/16 in.)
  • Type: Painting
  • Rights: CC0
  • External Link: https://clevelandart.org/art/2015.591
  • Medium: Fan-shaped painting mounted as hanging scroll; ink and gold on paper
  • Department: Japanese Art
  • Culture: Japan, Muromachi period (1392-1573)
  • Credit Line: Gift from the Collection of George Gund III
  • Collection: ASIAN - Hanging scroll
  • Accession Number: 2015.591
The Cleveland Museum of Art

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