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Art of Asia
Course: Art of Asia > Unit 2
Lesson 16: Qing dynasty (1644–1912)- Qing dynasty (1644–1911), an introduction
- Wang Shimin, Cloud Capped Mountains and Misty Riverside
- Bada Shanren, Lotus and Ducks
- Gong Xian, Eight Views of Landscape
- Wang Shishen, Garden scene album leaves
- Zhao Zhiqian, Flowers Album
- Portraits of Shi Wenying and Lady Guan
- Imperial Workshop and Giuseppe Castiglione, The Qianlong Emperor as Manjushri, the Bodhisattva of Wisdom
- Landscape: tea sipping under willows
- Ren Xiong, Self-Portrait
- The European Palaces of the Qianlong Emperor, Beijing
- Chinese export silver, a 19th-century Torah case
- Lacquer box decorated with images of Spring and longevity
- Zisha “Ru Ding” teapot, Yixing ware
- Vase of bottle shape with “garlic” mouth
- Européenerie on a Chinese Table Screen
- “One Hundred Birds” hanging scroll
- Summer chaofu (formal court dress) for a top-rank prince
- Hua Yan, Pheasant, Bamboo and Chrysanthemum
- Xunling, The Empress Dowager Cixi with foreign envoys’ wives
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Wang Shishen, Garden scene album leaves
Wang Shishen, album leaves, 1731 (Qing dynasty) (Shanghai Museum, China).
A conversation between Dr. Kristen Loring Brennan and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
A conversation between Dr. Kristen Loring Brennan and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(bright music) - [Narrator 1] We're here
in the Shanghai Museum, looking at some beautiful
18th century ink paintings of garden scenes of flower blossoms. - [Narrator 2] Here,
we have plum blossoms, some with bamboo, some with rockery, the garden subjects that were popular in 18th century, Yangzhou. - [Narrator 1] I feel keenly
aware of the monochrome aspect of these that this just
black ink on the paper, and yet so evocative of
the season of late winter of early spring of the promise of spring. - [Narrator 2] This is a scholarly subject that we have seen again and again, a subject that
calligraphers, poets embraced also because of the
technicalities of the brushwork that they could pair the
various styles of calligraphy along with their evocative
sentiments in the quatrains. - [Narrator 1] So we have
the black ink on paper, the emphasis on the personal
signature in the brushstroke. The combination of
calligraphy with painting, all of those coming together
here in the 18th century, but drawing on a very
rich and long tradition. - [Narrator 2] In 18th century, Yangzhou, they were really looking to the past, studying script styles of calligraphy, which were inscribed on
other earlier vessels. We see a contrast, not just
in taking different forms of calligraphy for each album leaf, some in seals script,
some in standard script, but also contrast in the brushwork. - [Narrator 1] Here they do the rock face. We have gray wash of the ink with leaves that are delicately painted with dark ink. In other areas, we see loose brush work to indicate the outline of a rock, and the brush feels dry in other areas where the artist is
giving a sense of the buds of the flowers with
touches of very dark ink. - [Narrator 2] In set against a void, framing this white background. It's a place to think
about the relationship between the inscription and the object. - [Narrator 1] We're talking
about literary circles of elite people. - [Narrator 2] And this is important because socially speaking, this was a new phenomenon in Yangzhou. This idea that the elite
were rebuilding the city after the massacre that had happened early in the Qing dynasty, the people who were investing
in these garden estates and patronizing these poets. This particular one here, Wang Shishen who had come from Anhui
province to paint in this city, they were coming to participate
in literary networks. The elite were actually the merchants. They were people who had
been active oftentimes in the salt administration, which was based there in
Yangzhou in 18th century. - [Narrator 1] This is drawing
on this hundreds of year old tradition going back to the Song dynasty, going back to the Yuan
dynasty of the literati, the scholar-artist-poet who expresses his subjective
feelings through his brushwork, through his paintings, through his poetry. But here, hundreds of years later in a self conscious way, developing that persona
as a way to market oneself as an artist and a poet. - [Narrator 2] And this was so interesting because in the Yuan dynasty, these artists didn't think of
themselves as professionals. Here, the Wang Shishen and
many others who were active in 18th century, Yangzhou,
were professionals. They traveled up and down the Grand Canal pedaling their poetry or their
painting, or sometimes both. - [Narrator 1] And this is
in star contrast to that literati scholar poet idea of the amateur who paints for himself, here, we have someone who
is drawing on that persona, but making a living as an artist. - [Narrator 2] And that's what
makes the Yangzhou phenomenon so interesting that these
artists moved up and down the Grand Canal to Hangzhou
and all the way up to Beijing. And they maybe had artist friends that they were in touch
with and visited over time. Their networks were far
beyond this one city. I find the 18th century Yangzhou artists, in particular, fascinating, simply because there were
so many of them active and bringing so many new styles
and ideas into this city. They're on the cusp of this new model that then takes off in
19th century Shanghai. And this connection to garden culture is revisited in a new way at this time. (bright music)