This file depicts only the painting of the larger handscroll. "the artist's inscription explains that this handscroll depicts the legendary hero zhong kui, known as the demon queller, setting out on a hunting exhibition with his sister. According to legend, when emperor xuanzong (reigned 712–56) fell ill with fever, he dreamt that a small demon broke into the palace. Suddenly, a large man calling himself zhong kui appeared, attacked the demon, and devoured it; when the emperor awoke, his illness had miraculously vanished. The emperor summoned a court painter to make a portrait of the figure in his dream, and the painting was distributed throughout the empire as a talisman to expel harmful spirits. By the tenth century, other popular legends and practices began to accrue around the figure of zhong kui; for example, he acquired both a wife and younger sister. In gong kai's humorous and imaginative painting, zhong kui and his sister are shown riding in sedan chairs. A retinue of slave-demons accompany them and carry zhong kui's sword, bundles of household goods, pots of wine, and smaller demons they have captured. "
—freer and sackler galleries. Date: Late 13th – early 14th century. Place of creation: China during the Yuan dynasty. Dimensions: H x W: 32.8 x 169.5 cm (12 15/16 x 66 3/4 in). Medium: ink on paper. Collection: Freer Gallery of Art. Gong Kai-Zhong Kui Traveling
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