Description
Book SynopsisThe Odyssey of China's Imperial Art Treasures traces the three-thousand-year history of the emperor's imperial collection, from the Bronze Age to the present. The tortuous story of these treasures involves a succession of dynasties, invasion and conquest, and civil war, resulting in valiant attempts to rescue and preserve the collection. Throughout history, different Chinese regimes used the imperial collection to bolster their own political legitimacy, domestically and internationally. The narrative follows the gradual formation of the Peking Palace Museum in 1925, then its hasty fragmentation as large parts of the collection were moved perilously over long distances to escape wartime destruction, and finally its formal division into what are today two Palace Museums-one in Beijing, the other in Taipei. Enlivened by the personalities of those who cared for the collection, this textured account of the imperial treasures highlights magnificent artworks and their arduous transit thro
Trade Review"A master narrative of the political life of art objects in China, from early Shang-dynasty bronze vessels to the remnant collections of the last Qing emperor now belonging to the National Palace Museum in Taiwan and the Palace Museum in Beijing. . . . The study is the first to present an extended account in English of the travails of creating, compiling, and protecting a national patrimony in tumultuous twentieth-century China."
* CAA Reviews *
"The story is enriched with the personalities and events that shaped the collections over the centuries, and the details of the study provide an informative background for specialists, students, and connoisseurs. This is a fascinating, enlightening study of a little-known subject. Highly recommended."
* Choice *
Table of ContentsForeword: The Saga of China's Imperial Collections, by Thomas Lawton
Prologue
1. China's Imperial Art Treasures from Early Times to the Twelfth Century
2. Imperial Treasures under the Ming and Qing Dynasties
3. From Private to Public Treasures: The Early Republican Era, 1911-1930
4. The Treasures through Times of War, 1931-1947
5. Relocating and Rebuilding the Palace Museum on Taiwan
6. The Gugong in Beijing: National Treasure and Political Object
7. Epilogue: The Politics of China's Imperial Art
Notes
Bibliography
Index