Not currently on view
In the collection of Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago · as of July 2026
FROM THE ART INSTITUTE OF CHICAGO’S CATALOG
Landscape painting offered artists the opportunity to create visual poems about the beauty and continuity of nature and man's place in it. Lu Zhi, a 16th-century artist, belonged to a class of highly educated men who painted for their own pleasure. In Distant Mountains , he used multiple ground planes and suggestive voids to create a majestic vista of jagged peaks and a meandering, wide river. Through the crystalline precision of his brush strokes, the artist achieved an image of great clarity and refinement.
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Tang Yin (Chinese, 1470–1523) — Mount Hua
Lu Zhi (Chinese, 1496–1576) — Daoist Retreat in Mountain and
Sōami (Japanese, d. 1525) — Landscape
Oguri Sotan — Landscape
Wang Meng — Quiet Life in a Wooded Glen 林麓幽居圖
Shi Rui (Chinese, c. 1400-c. 1470) — The Haven of the Peach-
Wen Zhengming (Chinese, 1470–1559) — Playing the Qin in a Se
Ike Taiga (Japanese, 1723–1776) — Spring Landscape
Hoashi Kyōu (Japanese, 1810–1884) — Sunset over Autumn Mount
Wen Boren — Landscape
Zha Shibiao (Chinese, 1615–1698) — Landscape Album in Variou
Wang Hui|Unidentified artist — 清 王翬 玉峰看月圖 軸|Landscape: Eve o