Not currently on view
In the collection of Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland · as of July 2026
FROM THE CLEVELAND MUSEUM OF ART’S CATALOG
The painting depicts high bamboo stems in a breeze with leaves all torn in one direction. The rock on the right suggests a garden setting. Bamboo remains green throughout the year; new shoots emerge every spring and are a Chinese delicacy. During the Yuan dynasty, monochrome ink painting became the dominant style of the scholar-artist, and is used here by a professional painter. Monochrome bamboo with leaves blown in the wind was a popular subject as its depiction demanded brushstrokes and techniques similar to writing calligraphy.
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Bamboo in Four Seasons: Winter
Ink Bamboo
Kaō — 伝可翁筆 竹図|Bamboo
Bamboo in Four Seasons: Spring
Yi Jeong — 탄은 이정 대나무 조선|灘隱 李霆 墨竹圖 朝鮮|Bamboo in the Wind
Puming (Xuechuang) (Chinese, active before 1274-after 1329)
Kuwayama Gyokushū
Ke Jiusi — 元 柯九思 臨文同墨竹圖 軸|Bamboo copied after Wen To
Ma Yu (Chinese, active 1706–1724) — Bamboo in the Wind
Liu Shiru — 明 劉世儒 雪梅圖 軸|Plum in snow
Bamboo in Four Seasons: Summer and Winter
Bamboo in Four Seasons: Spring and Autumn