Winner, 2011 Library Research Award for Undergraduate, Senior Non-Thesis DivisionThe Mustard Seed Garden Manual of Painting, first published in 1679, has been hailed as the most influential guide to painting ever produced in China, yet there is little evidence in support of this assertion. A close examination of the aesthetic qualities of extant prints from early editions of the manual, the social environment of the early Qing (1644-1911), and the nature of commercial book publications in this period clarifies the significance of this publication in contemporary society. In exploring each of these facets, I argue that the manual functioned as a luxury commodity, a symbol of elite status in a changing social order. For wealthy and socially a...
Beginning in the mid-1760s, images printed in more than five colors in early modern Japan were known...
From the Ming to the Qing dynasty, Qingming shanghe tu was among the paintings most frequently copie...
Beginning in the mid-1760s, images printed in more than five colors in early modern Japan were known...
Sometime before 1579, Zhou Lujing (1542--1633), a professional writer living in a bustling commercia...
Wood-block printing which originated in the T‘ang Dynasty remained to be monochrome down through the...
The sixteenth century in China was a period of rapid and unprecedented economic expansion. The perio...
In the West, Chinoiserie and Chinese export art have been studied extensively, however not until mus...
The Kangxi emperor (r. 1661-1722) revitalized the Pictures of Tilling and Weaving (Gengzhi Tu 耕織圖), ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 51-68)Painting has been the dominant form of Chinese art ...
In the early twentieth century, traditional-style painting practice was profoundly affected by the r...
In Western scholarship, eighteenth century Chinese paintings have consistently been seen as playful,...
Gardens are sites that can be at one and the same time admired works of art and valuable pieces of r...
This thesis illuminates painting inscriptions written in the Ming dynasty (1...
Rice Planting and The Hunt, two rare kesi 緙絲 (silk tapestry) in the collection of the Art Gallery of...
The canonic Chinese theme Pictures of Agriculture and Sericulture 耕織圖 (Chinese: gengzhitu, Japanese:...
Beginning in the mid-1760s, images printed in more than five colors in early modern Japan were known...
From the Ming to the Qing dynasty, Qingming shanghe tu was among the paintings most frequently copie...
Beginning in the mid-1760s, images printed in more than five colors in early modern Japan were known...
Sometime before 1579, Zhou Lujing (1542--1633), a professional writer living in a bustling commercia...
Wood-block printing which originated in the T‘ang Dynasty remained to be monochrome down through the...
The sixteenth century in China was a period of rapid and unprecedented economic expansion. The perio...
In the West, Chinoiserie and Chinese export art have been studied extensively, however not until mus...
The Kangxi emperor (r. 1661-1722) revitalized the Pictures of Tilling and Weaving (Gengzhi Tu 耕織圖), ...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 51-68)Painting has been the dominant form of Chinese art ...
In the early twentieth century, traditional-style painting practice was profoundly affected by the r...
In Western scholarship, eighteenth century Chinese paintings have consistently been seen as playful,...
Gardens are sites that can be at one and the same time admired works of art and valuable pieces of r...
This thesis illuminates painting inscriptions written in the Ming dynasty (1...
Rice Planting and The Hunt, two rare kesi 緙絲 (silk tapestry) in the collection of the Art Gallery of...
The canonic Chinese theme Pictures of Agriculture and Sericulture 耕織圖 (Chinese: gengzhitu, Japanese:...
Beginning in the mid-1760s, images printed in more than five colors in early modern Japan were known...
From the Ming to the Qing dynasty, Qingming shanghe tu was among the paintings most frequently copie...
Beginning in the mid-1760s, images printed in more than five colors in early modern Japan were known...