Hexagram 20: Guan -

Contemplation
Art & Design

Imperial Decorative Art

Imperial Dragon Lacquerware — Symbol of Heavenly Observation

Imperial Dragon Lacquerware — Symbol of Heavenly Observation

Imperial Workshops (Ming Dynasty (1368-1644))

The five-clawed dragon (wǔzhǎo lóng) was reserved for imperial use—symbol of the emperor's unique position as mediator between heaven and earth. But the dragon's primary function wasn't force. It was observation. Wind above, Earth below. The dragon moves through clouds (wind) observing the land (earth) beneath. This is guān (觀)—contemplation from proper distance. The dragon doesn't descend to micromanage. It maintains elevated perspective, watching patterns, influencing through presence rather than direct intervention. Chinese imperial theory: the emperor rules through virtue observed, not power exercised. The dragon clutching the pearl of wisdom represents this—authority based on understanding gained through contemplation. The flaming pearl is both what the dragon seeks (knowledge through observation) and what it possesses (wisdom that comes from proper distance). Lacquerware technique mirrors the concept: multiple layers built up slowly, each requiring patience and precision. The final surface—glossy black with brilliant gold—creates depth through contrast. You see the dragon, but also see your reflection. Observer and observed merge. This is the deeper meaning of guān: contemplation that transforms both watcher and watched.

Practical Integration

You're in position to observe but not control. This is harder than it sounds. The instinct when you can see problems is to descend and fix them. The dragon's wisdom: maintain elevation. Imperial Chinese governance theory distinguished between two types of rulership: ba (霸) - rule through force, and wang (王) - rule through virtue and example. The dragon represents wang. It doesn't need to enforce. Its presence in the clouds is sufficient. People look up, see the pattern, align themselves accordingly. Your equivalent: you've built something, accumulated knowledge, achieved vantage. Now the work is maintaining proper distance. Close enough to observe accurately. Far enough to see patterns invisible from ground level. The dragon clutching the pearl: you're seeking understanding (pearl) while simultaneously embodying it (dragon's authority comes from wisdom, not force). Here's the test: when you see problems in your organization, your project, your domain—do you immediately descend to fix them? Or do you observe, understand root causes, then influence through teaching and example? The wind moving over earth doesn't push individual blades of grass. It creates conditions where everything moves together. Lacquerware process matters: multiple thin layers, each requiring patience. You can't rush to glossy black and brilliant gold. You build depth through accumulated precision. Your contemplative practice is the same. Daily observation compounded over time creates understanding impossible to achieve through occasional intense focus. The classical text's key phrase: "Full of trust they look up to him." Authority through contemplation earns trust that force never can. People observe that you observe. They see you notice patterns, understand contexts, make decisions based on actual understanding rather than proximate triggers. This creates voluntary alignment—wind moving over receptive earth. But also: know the limits. The eighth month warning applies here too (see Hexagram 19). Contemplative distance can become disconnection. The dragon in clouds still needs the earth below. Observation without eventual action is paralysis disguised as wisdom. The text specifies: between ablution and offering. Contemplation is preparation for engagement, not substitute for it. Your task: observe from proper elevation. See patterns. Understand contexts. Then teach through example. Let your decisions demonstrate the understanding contemplation provides. Be both dragon (observer) and pearl (wisdom). The watching that transforms both watcher and watched.

References & Citations

  1. Chinese Dragon - Wikipedia
  2. Chinese Lacquerware - The Met Collection
  3. Chinese Art - Victoria and Albert Museum
  4. Chinese Imperial Dragons - Smithsonian

The Judgment

Contemplation. The ablution has been made, but not yet the offering. Full of trust they look up to him. The sacred pause between preparation and action—when observation itself becomes transformative, when watchers become teachers.

guānperspective
guàncleansing
érbut still
not
jiànsacrifice
yǒubeing
true
yóngdignified
ruòassumes

The Image

The wind blows over the earth: the image of Contemplation. Thus the ancient kings visited the regions of the world, contemplated the people, and gave them instruction. The CEO who reads user feedback, the astronaut who photographs Earth—observation that transforms into teaching.

fēngthe wind
xíngmoves
the earth
shàngover
guānperspective
xiānthe ancient
wángsovereigns
accordingly
xǐngvisit
fāngthe regions
guānperceived
mínthe people
shèto found
jiàothe teaching

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1童觀小人無咎君子吝

tóngchild's
guānperspective
xiǎofor little
rénpeople
no
jiùblame
jūnbut for a noble
young one
lìnan embarrassment

Line 2闚觀利女貞

kuīa pry
guānperspective
reward
a young lady
zhēnpersistence

Line 3觀我生進退

guānperceiving
our
shēnglives
jìnas
退tuìand

Line 4觀國之光利用賓于王

guānperceiving
guóa country
zhī...'s
guāngglory
it is worthwhile
yòngand useful
bīnbeing a guest
to
wángits

Line 5觀我生君子無咎

guānperceiving
our
shēnglives
jūna noble
young one
avoids
jiùblame

Line 6觀其生君子無咎

guānperceiving
another's
shēnglives
jūna noble
young one
avoids
jiùblame

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Wind (☴) above, Earth (☷) below—wind blows over the earth, touching everything, changing everything.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Guan means contemplation, observation, watching from elevated vantage point. The text describes the moment between ritual purification and offering—deepest concentration before action. Ancient Chinese towers served double purpose: observation post (looking out) and landmark (being seen from afar).

Character Analysis

觀 (guān) - to observe, to contemplate, to be an example. Apollo 8 embodies both meanings: the astronauts observe Earth from lunar orbit, while simultaneously serving as examples of human capability and perspective-taking. They are watchers and watched.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Earth

Upper Trigram

Wind

Binary

000011

Energy State

Observation from proper distance, influence through elevated perspective. Read bottom to top: earth's receptivity below (lines 1-2 yang, line 3 yin), wind's penetrating movement above (all yin). The strong foundation supports contemplative vantage.

Trigram Symbolism

☴ Wind (Upper) — The Gentle, penetrating, far-reaching influence ☷ Earth (Lower) — The Receptive, grounded, all-supporting Wind moves over earth—invisible force touching everything, changing perspective through gentle, persistent influence.

For the classical Wilhelm translation and line-by-line commentary, see Wilhelm Translation.