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Accumulating Culture The Collections Of Emperor Huizong Illustrated Patricia Buckley Ebrey

  • SKU: BELL-55463434
Accumulating Culture The Collections Of Emperor Huizong Illustrated Patricia Buckley Ebrey
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Accumulating Culture The Collections Of Emperor Huizong Illustrated Patricia Buckley Ebrey instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Washington Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 39.75 MB
Pages: 576
Author: Patricia Buckley Ebrey
ISBN: 9780295987781, 0295987782
Language: English
Year: 2008
Edition: Illustrated

Product desciption

Accumulating Culture The Collections Of Emperor Huizong Illustrated Patricia Buckley Ebrey by Patricia Buckley Ebrey 9780295987781, 0295987782 instant download after payment.

Winner of the Shimada Prize for Outstanding Work of East Asian Art History

By the end of the sixth century CE, both the royal courts and the educated elite in China were collecting works of art, particularly scrolls of calligraphy and paintings done by known artists. By the time of Emperor Huizong (1082-1135) of the Song dynasty (960-1279), both scholars and the imperial court were cataloguing their collections and also collecting ancient bronzes and rubbings of ancient inscriptions. The catalogues of Huizong's painting, calligraphy, and antiquities collections list over 9,000 items, and the tiny fraction of the listed items that survive today are all among the masterpieces of early Chinese art.

Patricia Ebrey's study of Huizong's collections places them in both political and art historical context. The acts of adding to and cataloguing the imperial collections were political ones, among the strategies that the Song court used to demonstrate its patronage of the culture of the brush, and they need to be seen in the context of contemporary political divisions and controversies. At the same time, court intervention in the art market was both influenced by, and had an impact on, the production, circulation, and imagination of art outside the court.

Accumulating Culture provides a rich context for interpreting the three book-length catalogues of Huizong's collection and specific objects that have survived. It contributes to a rethinking of the cultural side of Chinese imperial rule and of the court as a patron of scholars and the arts, neither glorifying Huizong as a man of the arts nor castigating him as a megalomaniac, but rather taking a hardheaded look at the political and cultural ramifications of collecting and the reasons for choices made by Huizong and his curators. The reader is offered glimpses of the magnificence of the collections he formed and the disparate fates of the objects after they were seized as booty by the Jurchen invaders in 1127.

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