On View In:
Gallery 203
Artist:   Qi Baishi  
Title:   Chrysanthemum  
Date:   20th century  
Medium:   Ink and colors on paper  
Dimensions:   54 1/16 x 13 3/8 in. (137.32 x 33.97 cm) (image)  
Credit Line:   Gift of Ruth and Bruce Dayton  
Location:   Gallery 203  

In China, flowers and birds were ubiquitous motifs in art. The endurance and resonance of these motifs arose not only from their natural beauty, but also through their cultural associations. The blossoms of chrysanthemum flowers embody purity. Among the last blooms of autumn, they were often regarded as a symbol of a scholarly recluse. Together with the orchid, the plum blossom, and bamboo they comprised a grouping known as the "Four Gentlemen." The flower is a favored motif among literati artists. Qi Baishi, one of the greatest Chinese painters in modern history, executed the flowers in mogu or "boneless style" and the leaves and blossoms are rendered without outline. The mixture of pure ink and red pigment translates the chrysanthemum's aesthetic of lofty elegance into a chaste and royal image.

Jennifer Steinkamp, a contemporary American installation artist, created a similar floral image using different media and conveying different ideas. Hurdy Gurdy Man (Chrysanthemums) (2006) is a computer-animated projection in which Steinkamp has set a traditional still-life subject into motion. A group of delicate, pastel-hued chrysanthemums seems to bob and sway to the Donovan song for which the piece is named. Their movement is mesmerizing, but also vaguely unsettling. The flowers in this work are based on her research of Chinese images of flowers at the Huntington Library in Los Angeles.

Artist/Creator(s)     
Name:   Baishi, Qi  
Role:   Maker  
Nationality:   Chinese  
Life Dates:   Chinese, 1863 - 1957  
 

Object Description  
  
Inscriptions:   Inscription; Stamps; Tag [When we departed last September, the chrysanthemums in the garden started to wither. When my son le  
Classification:   Painting  
Physical Description:   Three very tall, thin, straight plant stems with grey and black leaves; on top of each stem is a large red flower  
Creation Place:   Asia, China  
Accession #:   99.53.1  
Owner:   The Minneapolis Institute of Arts