Four Admonishments by Cheng Yi
Date2005
Maker
Son Man-jin
Korean, born 1964
Label TextA contemporary calligrapher, Son Man-jin transcribed the famous annotations to a Confucian proverb composed by Chinese philosopher Cheng Yi (1033-1107), a contributor to the establishment of Neo-Confucianism. Admonitions on looking, listening, speaking and movement (from left to right scroll) were the ethics and practices essential to perfect virtue, along with relevant visual arts, which induced the people to live a self-controlled and humble life.
A large ideogram expressing these four concepts is rendered in abstract splashes of ink, while Cheng Yi's interpretation appears in small characters. It vividly reinforces the Choson people's cultural identity, and may well serve as a contemporary reminder of restraint to the consumer society of today.
Master Cheng said, "I caution myself with these admonitions":
The admonition on looking says:
The mind-and-heart is originally unprejudiced, responding to things without trace. There is an essence to holding it fast, which may be found in the example of looking. Clouded by contact with the outside, what is within changes. Regulate it in its dealing with the external in order to still it internally. Subdue the self and return to ritual, and in time one will become true to one's nature.
Object number2007.93.1
ProvenanceDonor purchased from the artist
Photo CreditPhoto: Susan Cole
Exhibition HistorySeoul, Korea, Seoul Arts Center, Son Man-Jin, September 27, 2005- October 3, 2007 9/27/2007-10/3/2007Published ReferencesMan-Jin, Son, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul, Korea, 2005, pages 34-35
Ishikawa, Chiyo, ed. "A Community of Collectors: 75th Anniversary Gifts to the Seattle Art Museum." Seattle: Seattle Art Museum, 2007, illus. p. 90Credit LineGift of Frank S. Bayley III, in honor of the 75th Anniversary of the Seattle Art Museum
DimensionsOverall h. (mounting & endknobs & hanging cord): 111 x 36 5/8 in. (282 x 93 cm)
Image h. (calligraphy only): 84 1/8 x 30 3/8 in. (213.7 x 77.2 cm)
MediumInk on paper