Night-Shining White

Item

Night-Shining White
Title (Dublin Core)
Night-Shining White
Description (Dublin Core)
A leading horse painter of the Tang dynasty, Han Gan was known for capturing not only the likeness of a horse but also its spirit. This painting, the most famous work attributed to the artist, is a portrait of a charger of Emperor Xuanzong (r. 712–56). With its burning eye, flaring nostrils, and dancing hoofs, the fiery-tempered horse epitomizes Chinese myths about Central Asian "celestial steeds" that "sweated blood" and were actually dragons in disguise. The seals and inscriptions added to the painting and its borders by later owners and appreciators are a distinctive feature of Chinese collecting and connoisseurship. The addition of more than one thousand years of seals and comments offers a vivid testimony of the work's transmission and its impact on later generations.
The acquisition of this image, arguably the greatest equine portrait in Chinese painting, marked the Director's early commitment to revitalizing the Department of Asian Art under the curatorial leadership of Wen Fong and with the dedicated support of trustee Douglas Dillon.
Identifier (Dublin Core)
Painting, Chinese
Creator (Dublin Core)
Han, Gan, active 742-783
Date (Dublin Core)
Tang dynasty (618–907)
Medium (Dublin Core)
handscrolls
China paper
Chinese ink
Subject (Dublin Core)
Animals
Type (Dublin Core)
Painting
Format (Dublin Core)
Image: 12 1/8 x 13 3/8 in. (30.8 x 34 cm)
Overall with mounting: 14 in. x 37 ft. 5 1/8 in. (35.4 cm x 11.4 m)"
Language (Dublin Core)
Chinese (traditional) (language)
Rights Holder (Dublin Core)
Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.)
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Purchase, The Dillon Fund Gift, 1977
Site pages
Introduction