Nature’s Readymades: Chinese Scholar Rocks on Display at the Mitchell Art Museum at St. John’s College

Free and open to the public from January 23 to April 6, 2025

ANNAPOLIS, Md. [December 10, 2024] – The Elizabeth Myers Mitchell Art Museum (/m) at St. John’s College welcomes visitors to its latest exhibition, Nature’s Readymades, a display of Chinese scholar rocks, on view from January 23 to April 6, 2025. The museum will also host events that are free and open to the public, including lectures and tours.  

Collection of the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum at the U.S. National Arboretum in Washington, D.C. Photo credit: Stephen Voss. 

“A core question the show asks is, ‘Is there art in nature?’” say Shelly Bancroft and Peter Nesbett, the co-curators. “A related question is if there can be art without artists. Can we adopt an aesthetic attitude to objects that are extra-artistic?”

ABOUT NATURE’S READYMADES

Nature’s Readymades is an exhibition of gongshi (scholars’ rocks or viewing stones) drawn from the National Bonsai & Penjing Museum in Washington, D.C. Carved by nature and relished by Chinese literati as early as the Tang dynasty (7th c.), these paradoxical objects are worlds in miniature, presenting the vital energy of the universe in a hardened, static form. Not sculpted in the conventional sense, they predate Marcel Duchamp’s readymades by more than a millennium, and in many ways pose an even greater challenge to long-held definitions of art: they are unauthored and typically undated yet have long been understood and appreciated in artistic terms. Government officials steeped in poetry, literature, and art displayed them prominently in their studios, alongside brush and ink paintings.

In addition, the exhibition includes contributions from a range of scholars—a geologist, a novelist, an observational painter, two poets, a political scientist, a religious studies professor, and a sculptor—who each offer thoughts on a rock or stone in their personal possession. The participants include artist Ellen Altfest, who has spent the last eight months looking at and making a painting of a rock, and Ugo Rondinone, whose sculpture has been inspired, in part, by gongshi.

For more information on Mitchell Art Museum exhibits and programming, visit sjc.edu/mitchell or follow @sjcmitchell on Facebook and Instagram.

VISITING THE MITCHELL ART MUSEUM

The museum’s hours are Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday and Sunday, 12:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., and Friday, 2 p.m. to 7:30 p.m.

Exhibitions are always free and wheelchair accessible. Parking is available on weekends in the Mellon Parking Lot (off St. John’s Street, north of Calvert Street) or in the Calvert Street Garage (one block away) at 19 St. John’s Street, and during the week at the Gott’s Court Garage (two-and-a-half blocks away) at 25 Calvert Street. The museum is located at the heart of campus in Mellon Hall.

ABOUT THE MITCHELL ART MUSEUM (/m)

The only nationally accredited art museum in Anne Arundel County, the Elizabeth Myers Mitchell Art Museum at St. John’s College presents changing art exhibitions to the ever-curious. Our mission is to pose persistent and timely questions about the human experience through art and with extraordinary artists.

ABOUT ST. JOHN’S COLLEGE

St. John’s College is the most distinctive liberal arts college in the country due to our interdisciplinary program, in which 200 of the most revolutionary great books from across 3,000 years of human thought are explored in student-driven, discussion-based classes. By probing world-changing ideas in literature, philosophy, mathematics, science, music, history, and more, students leave St. John’s with a foundation for success in such fields as law, government, research, STEM, media, and education. Located on two campuses in two historic state capitals—Annapolis, Maryland, and Santa Fe, New Mexico—St. John’s is the third-oldest college in the United States and has been hailed as the “most forward-thinking, future-proof college in America” by Quartz and as a “high-achieving angel hovering over the landscape of American higher education” by the Los Angeles Times. Learn more at sjc.edu.

MEDIA CONTACT: Sara Luell, Senior Director of Communications and Operations, sara.luell(at)sjc.edu