The painting "Cat Tri Xuyen Di Cu Do" by author Vuong Mong (1308 - 1385) of the Yuan Dynasty (China). The original of the painting is kept at the Beijing Palace Museum. The painting depicts a rolling mountain landscape, below there is a small waterfall pouring down into a stream flowing through the stream, and there is a small person walking on a bridge across the stream. The composition of the painting looks very complicated, people in front of pristine nature, piled up with rocks and dense trees, become small.
The main character in the painting is Cat Hong (283 - 343), whose name is Tri Xuyen, on his way to the mountains, living in seclusion with nature to practice Buddhism. When she was young, Cat Hong set out to become a writer to revive Confucianism. He used to be a mandarin, but was bored with worldly affairs so he returned to hermitage, abandoned Confucianism to follow Taoism, and concentrated on alchemy. From alchemy, he sought the technique of immortality and strongly promoted Taoism. As a famous Taoist, naturalist and physician during the Eastern Jin Dynasty (266-420), he authored many books, most of which have been lost, but some are still passed down to posterity, in There is "The Fairy Tale", a book about spiritual practice and the art of immortality.
Author Vuong Mong (1308 - 1385) was one of the four most prominent painters of the Yuan Dynasty (China), with a knack for painting mountains and water with many details and complex layouts.