The design of the museum's Chinese garden is "based on a small courtyard within a scholar's garden in the city of
Suzhou,
China, called
Wang Shi Yuan, the
Garden of the Master of the Fishing Nets." Statements by officials of the museum credit Astor with the idea for the installation, stating that she recalled such gardens from a period of her childhood spent in
Beijing, China, "and thought that such a court would be ideal as the focal point for the permanent installation of Far Eastern art." The museum had purchased a collection of Ming Dynasty domestic furniture in 1976 with funds in part from the
Vincent Astor Foundation. The hall adjacent to the courtyard and architecturally unified with it was created to provide a suitable space to display this collection. In 1977,
Wen Fong, Special Consultant for Far East Affairs at the Metropolitan Museum and a professor at
Princeton University, went to China and visited gardens in Suzhou with Professor Chen Congzhou, an architectural historian from
Tongji University. The measurements of the small court were appropriate to the area the museum had in mind. Artist and
stage designer Ming Cho Lee, working from various architectural sketches and photographs, created drawings Suzhou officials responded positively and offered a number of modifications, and offered photographs of Taihu rocks they proposed be part of the design, and by the end of 1978 an agreement was signed for the project. The wood and
ceramic materials and elements were crafted in China and shipped to New York City, where assembly began in January 1980. ==Installation==