In this painting, the profusion of trees, the hanging rocks, and the mighty, ever-rising peaks, all testify to Wang's ingenuity in layout. The dominating colour is ochre and the brushstrokes are fine, dense and meticulous, displaying the "dry brush" technique of the Yuan period. The inscription says that this painting was done after the style of Huang Gongwang, as seen in the "hemp-fibre" texturing strokes, the flat cliff forms, and the horizontal dots depicting small trees. The mountain range continues in one sweep and is structured like a dragon's veins, giving it a sense of rhythmic movement as well as guiding the sightline of the viewer - one of the very characteristics of the style of that time.