Three Horses and Four Grooms

c. 1320s

Ren Renfa

Ren Renfa (Chinese, 1254–1328)

Chinese Art

Three Horses and Four Grooms, c. 1320s. Ren Renfa (Chinese, 1254–1328). Handscroll, ink and color on silk; painting: 28.5 x 137.5 cm (11 1/4 x 54 1/8 in.); overall: 29.2 x 556.4 cm (11 1/2 x 219 1/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Leonard C. Hanna, Jr. Fund 1960.181 Only the elegant first horse with a white blaze is accompanied by two grooms, as if its lightning speed required extra supervision.
Maker/Artist
Ren Renfa
Classification
Painting
Formatted Medium
handscroll, ink and color on silk
Dimensions
Painting: 28.5 x 137.5 cm (11 1/4 x 54 1/8 in.); Overall: 29.2 x 556.4 cm (11 1/2 x 219 1/16 in.)
Inscribed
Inscription: 月山道人. [印] 任氏子明 Translation: Artist's signature and seal: Yue shan dao ren. [seal] Ren shi zi ming. Inscription: 1 colophon and 16 additional seals: 1 poem, 1 colophon dated 1552 or 1612, and 3 seals of Wang Yiying 王一瀛 (1500s); 2 seals of Liang Qingbiao 梁清標 (1620-1691); 6 seals of the Qianlong 乾隆 Emperor (r. 1736-95); 3 seals of the Jiaqing 嘉慶 Emperor (r. 1796-1821); 1 seal of the Xuantong 宣統 Emperor (r. 1908-12); 1 seal of Yu Xiezhong 余協中 (1900s). Inscription: Poem and colophon by Wang Yiying 王一瀛 (1500s): As for painters of horses in the previous dynasty, Surely the name of Yueshan [Ren Renfa] must come first. Under his brush and on his silk, They seem to have just galloped out from the imperial stud. Now as the world overflows with inferiority, Who, from the stable, can recognize a dragon-horse amidst mediocrity. Ren Yueshan [Ren Renfa] of the Yuan Dynasty was best in horse paintings. The three fine steeds he painted in this scroll are so dashing, so vigorous in spirit that they have indeed grasped some of the "brush-idea" of Han Gan. Not long ago this painting came into the possession of Mr. Gui Shanquan, who asked for my inscription. And I, while reading the old manuscripts of Hengshan [Wen Zhengming, 1470-1559], by accident, came cross the poem quoted above. As the ancients said "in painting horses, Master Han was [inspired by and produced] real horses; in composing poems, Master Su [Su Dongpo, the leading Song poet] wrote as if a painting were before him." These are truly what should be considered the two excellences; indeed, they are to be treasured. In the sixth month of the renzi year [either 1552 or 1612]. Jian feng shan ren [The Mountain Dweller of the Sword Peak], Wang Yiying, written in the Qu si ting Pavilion at Chiyang.
Departments
Chinese Art
Accession Number
1960.181
Credit Line
Leonard C. Hanna, Jr. Fund
Rights Statement
CC0

Have a concern, a correction, or something to add?

Similar Artworks

musefully

Open source Elasticsearch & Next.js museum search.

Let's Stay Connected