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Yang Pu Moving His Family (detail)

ChineseYuan dynasty (1279–1368)

The Art Institute of Chicago

The Art Institute of Chicago
Chicago, United States

With a lively combination of realism and caricature, this detail of the painting "Yang Pu Moving His Family" depicts a group of peasants transporting a rustic scholar and his family across a stream. Distinguished by his official government cap, with its long streamers, the otherwise disheveled, bare-legged scholar bids farewell to his neighbors from the shallow water. Servants valiantly attempt to carry children and the family’s belongings—scrolls, furniture, and dishes—through the water. The scholar depicted here may represent Yang Pu, a character described in stories of the Southern Song dynasty (1127–1279). According to folklore, Yang Pu initially declined, and then reluctantly accepted, his appointment to a government position in the capital city. As Chinese law forbade civil officials from working in their native districts, many were required to move to distant cities. Painters and poets frequently depicted the theme of farewell or “noble parting” exemplified by the story of Yang Pu. The twigs that protrude from the official caps of the men depicted here may allude to the ancient Chinese custom of presenting departing friends with small branches from a willow tree.
— Entry, "Essential Guide", 2013, p. 102.

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  • Title: Yang Pu Moving His Family (detail)
  • Creator: Chinese
  • Date: Yuan dynasty (1279–1368)
  • Physical Dimensions: 52.7 × 231.1 cm (20 3/4 × 91 in.)
  • Type: Painting
  • External Link: The Art Institute of Chicago
  • Media: Handscroll; ink and light color on paper
  • Culture/Place: China
  • Credit Line: The Art Institute of Chicago, Kate S. Buckingham Endowment, 1952.9
  • Artist: Chinese
The Art Institute of Chicago

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