November 30, 2005: [achtung! kunst] London: The Three Emperors |
||
[image] A REGAL POSE: Yongzheng in Taoist guise in one of his "costume And the trio weren't even Chinese. They were Manchus, hunters and The Manchus had ousted the last Ming Emperor, whose rule was marked
by Kangxi was a strong and effective leader who ventured throughout
the For all his achievements in scholarship, empire building and propaganda, Though Yongzheng's reign was short — he may have accidentally poisoned Hongli, Yongzheng's favorite son and Kangxi's most beloved grandson, Qianlong was a true connoisseur. He not only admired bronzes from The Royal Academy exhibition is much more than Qing propaganda, The curators have brilliantly juxtaposed many of the items in the
show. Although the Manchus continued to rule China until the last Emperor http://www.time.com/time/europe/magazine/article/0,13005,901051128-1132776,00.html
telegraph, 15/11/2005 The Royal Academy's dazzling new blockbuster explores China's art at a time when the country was forging a new relationship with the West. Richard Dorment reports In pictures: the Three Emperors 1662-1795
[image] Spring's Peaceful Message, a hanging scroll by Giuseppe Castiglione (c 1736) These curiously deadpan portraits were executed by anonymous court artists according to a set of formal conventions established over centuries. The uniformity of the three poses, the diagrammatic treatment of the costumes and the flattened torsos are all characteristic of Chinese art. But something is different about these three images and it takes a moment or two to realise what it is: the subtle modelling of each vividly realistic face and the use of perspective in depicting the thrones are both pictorial traditions imported from the West. China: the Three Emperors focuses on the personalities of these very different rulers at the time of China's first extensive encounters with European art and technology. The works on show - dazzling, subtle and occasionally downright hideous - demonstrate the sheer diversity of aesthetic experience and the range of technological innovation that typified art made in the reigns of the three emperors. The period covered by the exhibition roughly corresponds to the reigns of Louis XIV, Louis XV and Louis XVI in France. Just as the Gobelins factory was established in Paris to produce furnishings for Louis XIV's household, and Louis XV controlled the royal factory for making Sèvres porcelain, so in China the imperial workshops existed to turn out paintings, porcelain, clocks and other luxuries for the emperor and his court. In the second gallery of this show, we are given some idea of the scale of the lands ruled by the Qing emperors in a series of staggeringly detailed silk hand scrolls, shown in vitrines that extend down most of the length of the gallery. To see the most beautiful one, depicting the Kangxi Emperor's Southern Tour of Inspection, the viewer starts at one end, with a marshy landscape, then slowly moves down the scroll to "travel" through mountainous terrain and over the Yangzi river. When we finally spot the emperor, he sits calmly enthroned on a vessel flying yellow pennants while wild winds and high waves rage around him. Apart from the incredible delicacy of the drawing, it's the insignificance of the tiny human figures against the vastness of an endlessly unfolding landscape that is so striking, a sense that to hold all these dominions together, the emperors must have been remarkable men. Around the walls of this gallery we find large-scale scroll paintings executed by the most brilliant of the many Jesuit artists at the Qing court, the Italian baroque painter Giuseppe Castiglione. Although these are painted in the traditional Chinese technique of colour and ink brushed on to silk, Castiglione uses the Western pictorial devices of foreshortening and perspective, while his figures are modelled in subtle tones of light and dark. Western, too, is the way he shows the emperors as ordinary men doing ordinary things. Castiglione depicts the Qianlong Emperor shooting deer in a forest, or on New Year's Eve surrounded by his young family. Later in the exhibition we will meet all three emperors depicted in a surprising number of different roles - as military men, Buddhist deities, Daoist priests, scholars, and connoisseurs. These roles reflect their different personalities. The Kangxi Emperor was a scholar, an austere man who commissioned dictionaries and encyclopaedias, and whose taste in art was for the low-keyed. The Yongzheng Emperor was more of an antiquarian, interested in collecting ancient bronzes, jades and porcelains from the Tang and Song dynasties. And the Qianlong Emperor was simply omnivorous in his collecting. Never before or since has one man amassed so stupendous a collection of fine and decorative art. Not only did he collect, but, like a modern curator, he also assessed, annotated and commented on the objects in his possession. [image] A charcoal stove from the Qianlong period All three emperors encouraged controlled contact with the West. If the Jesuits embedded themselves in the Chinese court in an attempt to convert the country to Christianity, the English and Dutch were in China for commercial reasons. To gain trade concessions, merchants and diplomats presented the emperors with Western clocks of gilt bronze studded with coloured stones. But the Chinese were quick to learn from the Europeans and we also see clocks made in royal workshops in Beijing under the supervision of the ubiquitous Jesuits. Later in the show, a series of 12 ravishing portraits of court beauties commissioned by the Yongzheng Emperor when he was still a prince reveal that one of these elegant ladies carried a Western pocket watch and another lived in an apartment with a Western-style table clock. The complex interaction between Eastern and Western techniques can be seen to perfection in a set of 12 chrysanthemum dishes made of delicate Chinese porcelain that has been embellished with the Western technique of enamelling. The depth and subtlety of the colours achieved by the marriage of the two materials is astonishing, while the flower-like shapes of the dishes come as close to perfection as you will ever see. Of course, this marriage of East and West sometimes went wrong. A gilded vase in the rococo style, made of copper inlaid with enamelled Western landscapes, must count as one of the ugliest objects ever exhibited at the Royal Academy. But then, Chinese taste is not Western taste. It is easy to admire a silk robe embroidered with hundreds of tiny birds and flowers, or a yellow porcelain bowl over-glazed with enamelled orchids, because they correspond to European ideas of beauty. But when I first looked at a case containing 10 sceptres (valued as good-luck talismans), I thought: "How ugly!" Then, on my second visit, I looked again at the intricately carved pieces of jade, coral, gold and boxwood, and found that they now exuded a sense of mystery - an exoticism that we find strange because it belongs so completely to Chinese conceptions of beauty, not ours. If at times the convolution, complexity and strong colours of these decorative objects feel visually indigestible, try to imagine them in the settings where they were first seen. The palaces of the Forbidden City are grand but austere. Against essentially monochrome backgrounds, richly coloured porcelains and cloisonné enamels would have lit up the rooms in which they were shown. But if you are simply not susceptible to the beauty of objects of such incredible elaboration, you are not alone. Even at the time of the three emperors, the luxurious art of the Qing court provoked a reaction. The Literati were independent artists and poets who painted simple studies of nature in a monochrome palette. They represented the puritan counter-reaction to the excess of the court style. In both their art and poetry, they valued naturalism over stylisation, and minimalism over excess. In the gallery where the works of the Literati are displayed, I was enchanted by a scroll showing squirrels competing for chestnuts by the artist Hua Yan, its utter simplicity the antithesis of much of the art in the rest of the show. As always, the incomparable Ivor Heal's design brings order and lucidity to a subject of extraordinary complexity. The organiser of this show, Dame Jessica Rawson, is one of Britain's living national treasures, a great scholar who has the ability to communicate her excitement about this material in vivid and easily digestible prose. All the catalogue essays are excellent (and the catalogue itself a work of art), but Rawson's stands out. I will slowly make my way through the catalogue over the coming months. There is no hurry because the show is on until April, and I intend to return again and again. # 'China: the Three Emperors' is at the Royal Academy of Arts, London W1 (0870 848 8484), until April 17. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/arts/main.jhtml?xml=/arts/2005/11/15/badorment15.xml
the china post, 2005/11/15
This is an exhibition that deserves to be seen for its sheer spectacle. Nothing except a visit to the Palace Museum in Beijing, where most of the exhibits come from, could give a better idea of the material splendor that surrounded the rulers of old China. The visitor is greeted by an array of highly realistic, life-size imperial portraits. Next door, in the R.A.'s grandest room, is one of the red-lacquered thrones on which the emperor sat, flanked by huge stands bearing bells and sonorous stones. Paintings on handscrolls chronicling the festive pageantry of imperial life run the length of the room. The mere dimensions of these are amazing. The scroll detailing the Qianlong emperor's 80th-birthday celebrations is more than 60 meters (about 65 yards) long. It would be hard to find a better example of Chinese pictorial space, which unwinds past you as you walk along. This is quite different from Renaissance perspective which you look into, as if you were in front of a stage. Though these scrolls are extraordinary, on close examination, there are not that many actual masterpieces of art to be seen. There is a huge amount of eye-popping jade, metalwork, ceramics and other artifacts. The costumes throughout are magnificent --and look as if they were run up yesterday. Outstanding paintings are thin on the ground, and, surprisingly, many of the best were painted by an Italian. And it must be admitted that there is quite a bit that, by the standards of old-fashioned good taste, is hideous. A solid gold Buddhist tea ewer with enamel floral decorations wins the prize in that department. It looks like something from Liberace's piano. There is plenty more in that vein. That is partly because, in terms of Chinese history, the period of this exhibition is rather recent -- not much older than the day before yesterday. The trio of emperors in question -- the Kangxi emperor (1662-1722), the Yongzheng emperor (1723- 35), and the Qianlong emperor (1736-95) belonged to an upstart dynasty of interlopers who conquered China. They were Manchus, a north-east Asian people from beyond the Great Wall, who swept in and destroyed the preceding Ming Dynasty. Their successors ruled until 1911. Since they were followed by a turbulent period of political change and warfare, in many ways their real successors are the Chinese communist leaders of today. There is some irony in the fact that Hu Jintao, the Chinese president whose visit to London coincides with the opening of the R.A. exhibition, was greeted by banners calling for a free Tibet. It was in fact the Kangxi emperor who originally annexed that country in 1720. Indeed, the Manchus created the modern Chinese state: A multiethnic empire that comprises not only the ancient Middle Kingdom, but a large swath of Islamic central Asia and also Mongolia, now independent again. The Manchus -- non-Chinese, and initially not Mandarin- speaking either -- were careful to maintain the outward trappings of their predecessors. They took over the Ming capital, Beijing, and the old Imperial Palace, also known as the Forbidden City. Yet they were also innovators. And they were the first Chinese rulers to encounter Western Europeans in force. A huge painting, "Envoys From the Vassal States and Foreign Countries Presenting Their Gifts to the Emperor" (1761), depicts various wigged and frock-coated emissaries paying their respects. The Manchus did not order an overnight westernization (as did their contemporary, Peter the Great, in neighboring Russia). But Chinese officialdom did toy with conversion to Christianity and succumbed to a more lasting fascination with western gadgets --especially clocks and automatons. A bizarre example of multiple cross-cultural fusion is a clock by an Englishman, Timothy Williamson. It is a piece of chinoiserie -- a European rococo style based on a very loose imitation, almost a caricature, of Chinese art. But it was exported and proudly installed in the Imperial Palace in Beijing. The work of a Jesuit missionary-painter, Giuseppe Castiglione (1688-1766), is prominent in the exhibition and fascinating. Castiglione, whose Chinese name was Lang Shining, came up with a blend of Chinese and Occidental painting that you might call Sino-Baroque. His equestrian portrait of the Qianlong emperor (1739 or 1758) is very much the sort of image Velazquez produced of the Spanish Hapsburgs, except the emperor is riding through a traditional, misty and monochrome Chinese landscape. The effect is a bit like a collage. Some of Castiglione's work is beautiful: "Spring's Peaceful Marriage," for example, from about 1736, has an odd look of pop art, with its combination of bright colors, stylization and near-photo-realism. The great age of Chinese painting was centuries in the past, though diehard Ming gentlemen such as Kuncan (1612 to about 1673) could still work in that idiom with conviction. Look out for his "Landscape After Night Rain Shower" (1660). This exhibition suggests that in China, superficially everything was continuing as it always had -- while beneath the surface much was changing. That combination is very Chinese. The show, which is sponsored by Goldman Sachs Group Inc., continues through April 17. http://www.chinapost.com.tw/art/detail.asp?ID=72004&GRP=h
__________________ with kind regards, Matthias Arnold
An archive of this list as well as an subscribe/unsubscribe facility is
|
||