Hexagram 46: Sheng -

Pushing Upward
Fine Art
Albert Bierstadt — Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains

Albert Bierstadt — Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains

Albert Bierstadt (1868)

Bierstadt painted this after traveling through the Sierra Nevada in the 1860s during the period of western expansion. The composition leads the eye from the foreground lake upward through waterfalls to towering mountain peaks. This vertical movement from low to high ground connects to hexagram 46's theme of pushing upward.

Practical Integration

The Sierra Nevada, 1868. Albert Bierstadt paints the view from valley floor to mountain summit—a lake in the foreground reflects surrounding peaks, waterfalls cascade down cliff faces, the eye travels upward through successive ridges to the highest snow-covered crests. The massive canvas leads the viewer's gaze through vertical stages, each elevation revealing the next. Bierstadt made the journey west during the era of Manifest Destiny, documenting the ascent from lowland to alpine heights. Bierstadt painted this after traveling through the Sierra Nevada in the 1860s during the period of western expansion. The composition leads the eye from the foreground lake upward through waterfalls to towering mountain peaks. This vertical movement from low to high ground connects to hexagram 46's theme of pushing upward. This is Shēng (升), Pushing Upward, the hexagram of gradual but steady elevation. The character shows a vessel used for measuring grain—advancement through accumulated small increments rather than sudden leaps. The trigram structure places Earth (Kūn) above Wind (Xùn): receptive ground receiving the gentle, persistent penetration of wind from below, the way seeds push through soil toward light. Bierstadt's composition mirrors this vertical structure—the painting climbs from shadowed foreground through illuminated middle ground to brilliant peaks, each section building on the one below. The Judgment text states: \"Pushing Upward has supreme success. One must see the great man. Fear not. Departure toward the south brings good fortune.\" The text promises success through upward movement but emphasizes the need for guidance (seeing the great man) and proper direction. Bierstadt's painting includes tiny human figures and animals at the lake's edge, dwarfed by the surrounding peaks—scale establishing the magnitude of the ascent before them. In Zhou Dynasty practice, this hexagram appeared when officials received promotions through merit, when students advanced through examinations, when building projects proceeded stage by stage toward completion. The counsel addresses sustainable climb rather than reckless scrambling, advancement that builds on solid foundation. The Image Text observes: \"Within the earth, wood grows: the image of Pushing Upward. Thus the superior person of devoted character heaps up small things in order to achieve something high and great.\" The image of a tree growing from seed through soil captures the hexagram's essential principle—organic upward development, growth that accumulates incrementally. Bierstadt's waterfalls demonstrate this same principle in reverse and then forward—water descends from heights, collects in the lake, then evaporates to form clouds that rise again to the peaks. In the I-Ching sequence, Shēng follows Cuì (gathering together): after people collect comes the potential for collective elevation, the gathered energy directed upward. The painting's vertical composition creates visual ascent, the eye pushed upward from lake to waterfall to ridge to summit, each stage of the climb visible in the towering landscape.

References & Citations

  1. Among the Sierra Nevada Mountains — Albert Bierstadt-1868. Bierstadt painted this after traveling through the Sierra Nevada in the 1860s during the period of western expansion. The composition leads the eye from the foreground lake upward through waterfalls to towering mountain peaks. This vertical movement from low to high ground connects to hexagram 46's theme of pushing upward.

The Judgment

Pushing Upward has supreme success. One must see the great man. Fear not. Departure toward the south brings good fortune. Success through natural development and seeking wise guidance.

shēngadvancement
yuánfirst-rate
hēngfulfillment
yònguseful
jiànto see
mature
rénhuman being
do not
worry
nánsouth
zhēngexpedition
promising

The Image

Within the earth, wood grows: the image of Pushing Upward. Thus the superior man of devoted character heaps up small things in order to achieve something high and great.

earth
zhōngwithin
shēnggrows
wood
shēngadvancement
jūnnoble
young one
accordingly
shùnaccepting
character
add
xiǎolittle
into
gāothe high
full

The Lines (爻辭)

Line 1允升大吉

yǔnwelcome
shēngadvance
much
promise

Line 2孚乃利用禴

sincerity
nǎiis
the real worth
yòngin
yuèthe modest

Line 3升虛邑

shēngadvancing on
empty
town

Line 4王用亨于岐山吉無咎

wángthe sovereign
yòngwill make
hēngoffering(s)
to
Split
shānMountain
promising
not(hing) (is)
jiùwrong

Line 5貞吉升階

zhēnpersistence
promising
shēngthe advance
jiēby in steps

Line 6冥升利于不息之貞

míngthe blind
shēngadvance
worthwhile
to
not being
laxity
zhīin
zhēnpersistence

Historical Context

Oracle Bone Script

Earth (☷) above, Wood (☴) below—wood growing upward through earth, natural effortless ascent, pushing toward light.

Period

Zhou Dynasty

Traditional Use

The classical text describes pushing upward, organic growth from below, rising through receptive yielding rather than forceful assertion. The plant grows through earth without resistance. Progress happens naturally when conditions are right.

Character Analysis

The character 升 (shēng) means to rise, ascend, promote. The wood trigram below earth suggests growth from roots upward—invisible foundation producing visible ascent. Turing: abstract mathematics (hidden roots) growing upward to define all future computing (visible growth).

Configuration

Lower Trigram

Wind

Upper Trigram

Earth

Binary

011000

Energy State

Wood growing beneath and through earth—the natural upward push of roots and stems, organic development that proceeds inevitably when foundation is solid.

Trigram Symbolism

☷ Earth (Upper) - The Receptive, yielding, allowing growth ☴ Wood (Lower) - The Gentle, penetrating, persistent growth Pushing upward through flexibility and persistence, not force.

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