Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368)

In the hands of highly educated scholar-artists, brushwork became calligraphic and assumed an autonomy that transcended its function as a means of creating representational forms.
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Belt slide with a falcon attacking a swan, Jade (nephrite), China
China
12th–14th century
Textile with Animals, Birds, and Flowers, Silk embroidery on plain-weave silk, Eastern Central Asia
Eastern Central Asia
late 12th–14th century
Safe Conduct Pass (Paiza) with Inscription in Phakpa Script

, Iron with silver inlay, China
China
late 13th century
Cosmological Mandala with Mount Meru, Silk tapestry (kesi), China
China
14th century
Panel with Phoenixes and Flowers, Silk and metallic thread embroidery on silk gauze, China
China
14th century
Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (Guanyin), Wood (wiillow) with traces of pigment; single woodblock construction, China
China
dated 1282
Wang Xizhi watching geese, Qian Xuan  Chinese, Handscroll; ink, color, and gold on paper, China
Qian Xuan
ca. 1295
Grooms and horses, Zhao Mengfu  Chinese, Handscroll; ink and color on paper, China
Multiple artists/makers
dated 1296 and 1359
Seated bodhisattva, Porcelain with relief decoration under bluish white glaze (Jingdezhen Qingbai ware), China
China
late 13th–early 14th century
Cup Stand with the Eight Buddhist Treasures, Silver with repoussé decoration, China
China
14th century
Incense Burner in Shape of Lion (one of a pair), Porcelain with brown and raised decoration under celadon glaze (Jingdezhen Qingbai ware), China
China
early 14th century
Tray with women and boys on a garden terrace
, Carved red lacquer, China
China
14th century
Dish with long-tailed birds and hibiscuses, Zhang Cheng  Chinese, Carved red lacquer, China
Zhang Cheng
mid-14th century
Twin Pines, Level Distance, Zhao Mengfu  Chinese, Handscroll; ink on paper, China
Zhao Mengfu
ca. 1310
Buddha of Medicine Bhaishajyaguru (Yaoshi fo), Water-based pigment over foundation of clay mixed with straw, China
China
ca. 1319
Vajrabhairava mandala, Silk tapestry (kesi), China
China
ca. 1330–32
Plate with fish, Porcelain painted with cobalt blue under transparent glaze (Jingdezhen ware), China
China
mid-14th century
Fisherman, Wu Zhen  Chinese, Handscroll; ink on paper, China
Wu Zhen
ca. 1350
Simple Retreat, Wang Meng  Chinese, Hanging scroll; ink and color on paper, China
Wang Meng
ca. 1370

During the Yuan dynasty, China—for the first time in its long history—was completely subjugated by foreign conquerors and became part of a larger political entity, the vast Mongol empire. Ironically, during this century of alien occupation, Chinese culture not only survived but was reinvigorated.

Lacking experience in the administration of a complex empire, the Mongols gradually adopted Chinese political and cultural models. Ruling from their capital in Dadu (also known as Khanbaliq; now Beijing), the Mongol Khans increasingly assumed the role of Chinese emperors. During the 1340s and 1350s, however, internal political cohesion disintegrated as growing factionalism at court, rampant corruption, and a succession of natural calamities led to rebellion and, finally, dynastic collapse.

In spite of the gradual assimilation of Yuan monarchs, the Mongol conquest imposed a harsh new political reality upon China. As a group, the literati were largely ignored by the Mongols; those few who did enter government service often received only minor appointments, either as teachers in local schools or as low-level clerks. Southern Chinese, having resisted the Mongol invasion the longest, faced a conscious policy of discrimination, leading many scholars to withdraw from public life to pursue their own personal and artistic cultivation, often under the aegis of the Buddhist or Daoist religions. Drawing on the scholar-official aesthetic of the late Northern Song, Yuan literati painters no longer took truth to nature as their goal but rather used painting as a vehicle for self-expression. In the hands of highly educated scholar-artists, brushwork became calligraphic and assumed an autonomy that transcended its function as a means of creating representational forms.


Contributors

Department of Asian Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art

October 2001


Citation

View Citations

Department of Asian Art. “Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368).” In Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2000–. http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/yuan/hd_yuan.htm (October 2001)