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
By the 1500s, visits to historic and scenic sites in the lower Yangzi delta stimulated an increase of printed illustrated travel books. Topographical depictions of local scenery flourished. Leaves from this album illustrates sites around Lake Tai of the two adjacent counties Changxing and Wuxing (modern Huzhou). Song Xu, who lived intermittently in Jiaxing and Songjiang, must have passed through Wuxing by boat and thus knew the region. The paintings are inscribed with gazetteerlike notations, suggesting that the album was produced for clients as commemorative works, a travel guide, or for “armchair travel” ( woyou ) in one’s mind.
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Kuncan (Chinese, 1612–c. 1673) — Spring Landscape
Landscape with Streams and Mountains
Wang Yuanqi — Landscape
Wang Meng (Chinese, c. 1308–1385) — Writing Books under the
Liu Yu — 清 柳堉 幽谷深林圖 卷|Remote Valleys and Deep Forests
Wang Yuanqi (Chinese, 1642–1715) — Landscape after Ni Zan
Zhai Dakun (Chinese, d. 1804) — Landscape
Wang Yuanqi — 清 王原祁 輞川圖 卷|Wangchuan Villa
Zhai Dakun (Chinese, d. 1804) — Landscape in the Style of Ch
Wang Hui — 倣趙伯駒山水圖 軸|Landscape in the Style of Zhao Boju (Fa
Ike Taiga (Japanese, 1723–1776) — West Lake
Wen Zhengming — 明 文徵明 樓居圖軸|Living Aloft: Master Liu's Retre