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The Stone Table Garden

Sun Kehongdated 1572

Asian Art Museum

Asian Art Museum
San Francisco, United States

The artist who painted this scroll was Sun Kehong, a very wealthy and generous resident of the city of Huating, in what is now Shanghai. The scroll was painted for Lu Yashan, another famous Huating resident, and depicts Lu's garden, which was called the "Stone Table Garden" after a large stone table placed within one of its bamboo groves. This section of the scroll shows Lu watching a young boy watering potted plants. The Stone Table Garden is an ambitious work that took considerable time, so it is likely that Lu produced it for an important occasion. The presence of a crane, traditionally a symbol of immortality, may indicate that this was a birthday gift. Since the painting was created by one member of the elite (whose social status indicates that he would have been an amateur artist) as a gift to another, it is doubtful that the artist was paid.

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  • Title: The Stone Table Garden
  • Creator: Sun Kehong (Chinese, 1532-1610) (Artist)
  • Date Created: dated 1572
  • Physical Dimensions: H. 12 1/4 in x W. 146 in, H. 31.1 cm x W. 370.8 cm (image); H. 12 7/8 in x W. 262 7/8 in, H. 32.7 cm x W. 667.7 cm (overall)
  • Rights: Public Domain
  • Medium: Ink and colors on paper
  • Credit Line: Asian Art Museum, Transfer from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, Gift of Mrs. Edward T. Harrison, B69D52
Asian Art Museum

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