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Image Not Available for An Earthly Paradise Beneath the Sky
An Earthly Paradise Beneath the Sky
Image Not Available for An Earthly Paradise Beneath the Sky

An Earthly Paradise Beneath the Sky

Maker (Chinese, 1898-1991)
Date1966
MediumHanging scroll, ink on paper
DimensionsMounting: 61 × 42 in. (154.9 × 106.7 cm)
Panel: 22 1/2 × 37 1/2 in. (57.2 × 95.3 cm)
Credit LineAnonymous Gift
Object number1992.64
Object TypePaintings
On View
Not on view
In this late work, Huang Junbi takes an expressive, almost playful approach to ink painting. His vigorous brushwork lays daubs of black ink across the white expanse of the paper, creating a fragmented yet inspired landscape that looms protectively over a solitary boat in the distance. The title of the painting refers to a poem by the Tang dynasty (618–907) poet Li Bo, entitled "A Reply to Someone on a Hill." The calming effect of nature celebrated in this poem permeates Huang’s work.

In the early 1920s, when Huang first began to practice ink painting in earnest, the Lingnan School of the artist’s native Guangdong province was the innovative force in the field of guohua or "national painting" in Republican-period China. While not formally associated with the Lingnan painters—who favored bold colors, simplified natural forms, and scenes of daily life and China’s natural wonders in their brush-and-ink compositions—Huang did incorporate aspects of their techniques, including the direct observation of nature.

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