Hexagram 27: Yi -

Nourishment
Fine Art
Vincent van Gogh — The Potato Eaters

Vincent van Gogh — The Potato Eaters

Vincent van Gogh (1885)

Van Gogh's early work depicts Dutch peasants gathered around a simple meal they have earned through hard labor. The dark palette and rough faces emphasize the basic sustenance that nourishes life, connecting to the hexagram's theme of proper nourishment and what truly sustains us.

Practical Integration

Dutch peasants gather in lamplight around their evening meal—potatoes dug from fields they worked since dawn. Vincent van Gogh painted these figures in 1885 using earth tones and shadow, emphasizing the coarse hands that lift food to mouths. The faces are weathered, the room spare. Nothing decorative or refined appears; the painting insists on basic sustenance earned through labor. Steam rises from the dish of potatoes. One woman pours coffee. This is nourishment at its elemental level—fuel for bodies that must rise again tomorrow. Zhou Dynasty diviners called this hexagram Yi (頤), meaning \"corners of the mouth\" or \"jaws.\" The character depicts the lower face, emphasizing physical intake. Mountain (Gen) sits above Thunder (Zhen): stillness above, movement below—the mouth's structure (jaw holding still) enables eating (tongue and throat in motion). Ancient practitioners saw this configuration when questions of sustenance arose, both physical and spiritual. What feeds you? What do you feed? Van Gogh's peasants embody the hexagram's physical dimension, but the painting itself nourishes viewers through honest representation of labor's dignity. Van Gogh's early work depicts Dutch peasants gathered around a simple meal they have earned through hard labor. The dark palette and rough faces emphasize the basic sustenance that nourishes life, connecting to the hexagram's theme of proper nourishment and what truly sustains us. The Judgment text states: \"Pay heed to the providing of nourishment and to what a man seeks to fill his own mouth with.\" The warning cuts two ways—what you consume matters, and what you offer others matters. Van Gogh wrote to his brother that these peasants \"have honestly earned their food,\" distinguishing nourishment obtained through rightful effort from consumption divorced from production. Song Dynasty commentary on this hexagram distinguished between those who nourish themselves (earning their bread) and those who nourish others (teachers, rulers, parents). The painting captures the former; the act of painting serves the latter. The Image Text offers counsel: \"The superior person is careful of his words and temperate in eating and drinking.\" Moderation in intake applies to speech as to food—both enter through the mouth's corners. Van Gogh's peasants speak little in the painting; their nourishment is silent, concentrated, necessary. In the I-Ching's sequence, Nourishment follows Great Accumulating Force: after gathering strength (26), one must sustain it through proper feeding (27). The potatoes glow humble and sufficient under lamplight, offering what bodies need without excess or ornament—nourishment as fact rather than performance.

References & Citations

  1. The Potato Eaters — Vincent van Gogh-1885. Van Gogh's early work depicts Dutch peasants gathered around a simple meal they have earned through hard labor. The dark palette and rough faces emphasize the basic sustenance that nourishes life, connecting to the hexagram's theme of proper nourishment and what truly sustains us.

The Judgment

Providing Nourishment. Perseverance brings good fortune. Watch the mouth—what goes in, and what comes out.

hungry
zhēnpersistence
is promising
guānwatch
the hungry mouth
starting
qiúthe search
kǒuto the mouth
shíto the substance

The Image

Thunder at the mountain's foot: temperate eating, careful speech. Examine origin before consumption.

shānthe mountain
xiàbelow
yǒuis
léithe thunder
hungry mouth
jūnthe noble
young one
accordingly
shènis mindful of
yánwords
and expression
jiéand restrained
yǐnin drinking
shíand eating

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1舍爾靈龜觀我朵頤凶

shěforsake
ěryour
língspirit
guītortoise
guānand
me
duǒhanging open
with hungry mouth
xiōngunfortunate

Line 2顛頤拂經于丘頤征凶

diānabnormal
appetite
dismiss
jīngthe norms
and going to
qiūthe hilltops
with hungry mouth
zhēngpressing
xiōngis misfortune

Line 3拂頤貞凶十年勿用無攸利

dismissing
the hungry mouth
zhēnpersistence
xiōngis unfortunate
shífor ten
niányears
not to be
yònguseful
this is no
yōua direction
with merit

Line 4顛頤吉虎視眈眈其欲逐逐無咎

diānabnormal
appetite
is promising
the tiger
shìlooks
dānstaring
dānand staring
with its own
passion
zhúis to hunt
zhúand give chase
but no
jiùblame

Line 5拂經居貞吉不可涉大川

dismissing
jīngthe norms
to practice
zhēnpersistence
is promising
but one is not
suited
shèto
the great
chuānstream

Line 6由頤厲吉利涉大川

yóuat
the appetites
distress
but promising
it is worthwhile
shèto cross
the great
chuānstream

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

☶ Mountain (upper jaw) over ☳ Thunder (lower jaw): the mouth. Nourish wisely.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

Pay heed to food and words; nourishment must be correct in source and measure.

Character Analysis

Mass rations with concealed provenance = improper nourishment. The hexagram asks for scrutiny before intake—caloric or informational.

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Thunder

Upper Trigram

Mountain

Binary

100001

Energy State

Movement (taking in) constrained by stillness (discernment).

Trigram Symbolism

Upper jaw steadies; lower jaw acts. Intake and speech share a gate.

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