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Imperial Illusions: Crossing Pictorial Boundaries in the Qing Palaces

Contributor(s): Kleutghen, Kristina (Author)

ISBN: 9780295994109

Publisher: University of Washington Press

Hardcover
$70.00
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Pub Date: January 1, 2015

Dewey: 759.951

LCCN: 2014007530

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 1.27" H x 10.16" L x 7.75" W ( 3.15 lbs) 400 pages

BISAC Categories:

Art | Asian | General | History | Asia | China

Series: Art History Publication Initiative

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

In the Forbidden City and other palaces around Beijing, Emperor Qianlong (r. 1736-1795) surrounded himself with monumental paintings of architecture, gardens, people, and faraway places. The best artists of the imperial painting academy, including a number of European missionary painters, used Western perspectival illusionism to transform walls and ceilings with visually striking images that were also deeply meaningful to Qianlong. These unprecedented works not only offer new insights into late imperial China's most influential emperor, but also reflect one way in which Chinese art integrated and domesticated foreign ideas.

In Imperial Illusions, Kristina Kleutghen examines all known surviving examples of the Qing court phenomenon of "scenic illusion paintings" (tongjinghua), which today remain inaccessible inside the Forbidden City. Produced at the height of early modern cultural exchange between China and Europe, these works have received little scholarly attention. Richly illustrated, Imperial Illusions offers the first comprehensive investigation of the aesthetic, cultural, perceptual, and political importance of these illusionistic paintings essential to Qianlong's world.

Art History Publication Initiative. For more information, visit http: //arthistorypi.org/books/imperial-illusions

Brief description: Kristina Kleutghen is associate professor of art history and archaeology at Washington University in St. Louis. She is the author of Imperial Illusions: Crossing Pictorial Boundaries in the Qing Palaces (Washington, 2015).

Review Quotes:

"Kristina Kleutghen's carefully conceived new study. . . sits comfortably at the intersection of these two academic subfields, and provides specialists of both with an overdue, in-depth analysis of this remarkable moment of cross-cultural encounter. . . . The reader familiar with the historiography on the Qing will find a remarkably cohesive review of recent scholarship as it applies to the visual arts; to the nonspecialist, the volume provides an excellent entrée to Qing visual culture and the Qianglong Empire (1711-1799, r. 1736-1795). . . . Imperial Illusions provides the ideal platform for rethinking eighteenth-century court art as distinctively Qing."

--Michele Matteini "CAA Reviews"

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