The department of Chinese art is responsible
for collecting, researching, exhibiting, and publishing the
arts of China. The collection began in the 1920s, and took
shape in the 1940s and 1950s. From the 1960s onward holdings
expanded from a core of Chinese ceramics to include Chinese
paintings, ancient bronzes, jades, and other decorative arts.
Lacquers acquired through the assistance of the Sammy Yu-kuan
Lee family are the finest in America and represent perhaps
the greatest strength of the collection.
The department’s collection of Chinese art ranges from
the Neolithic period (about 5000–1800 B.C.) to the Qing
dynasty (1644–1911), with master works from each period.
Ceramics include small and large tomb sculpture notably from
the Han (206 B.C.–A.D. 220), Tang (618–906), Yuan
(1279–1368), and Ming (1368–1644) dynasties. Functional
wares from significant kilns such as longquan (celadon), ding
, qingbai , jun , jian , jizhou , and cizhou of the Song (960–1279)
and Yuan dynasties document the quality of ceramic artistry
during this classic phase of aesthetic and technical development.
Yuan, Ming, and Qing underglaze- and overglaze-decorated porcelains
demonstrate creative departures in the later history of Chinese
ceramics. Metalwork in the collection is highlighted by bronze
ritual vessels from the Shang (1600–1023 B.C.) through
the Han dynasties. The department’s Chinese lacquerware
is renowned for its breadth and quality, beginning with early
examples from the Warring States and Han periods. Its holdings
of lacquers from the Song, Yuan, Ming, and Qing include the
full range of decorative techniques—carved, gold-etched,
inlaid, and painted—with numerous examples created for
the emperors during the Ming and Qing dynasties. Also outstanding
are lacquers from the fifteenth to seventeenth centuries from
the Ryukyuan Islands, which were greatly influenced by China
before their subsequent connection to Japan. The department’s
Chinese painting collection is especially strong in seventeenth-century
landscape paintings done by members of the scholar-gentry,
including works by Xiang Shengmo, Xiao Yuncong, Cheng Zhengkui,
Gong Xian, Shitao, and Zhang Hong. Though modest in size, the
holdings of Korean art in the collection include some significant
Buddhist paintings from the Choson period.
In the Chinese art galleries, objects are displayed within
a chronological sequence and presented in a manner that highlights
their original function and context. A scholar’s studio,
for example, displays furniture and other writing- and painting-related
implements used by the Chinese scholar-gentry. Luxurious Chinese
textiles are also integrated in the Ming and Qing galleries
to show the richness of court taste. Object labels are provided
in English and Chinese.
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Highlights from Chinese Art
Browse Chinese Art Collections online
China, Shanxi Province, ancient state of Jin Lidded Ritual Food Cauldron (Ding) with Interlaced Dragons, Mid. Eastern Zhou dyn., late Spring and Autumn per. or early Warring States per., about 500-450 B.C. Cast bronze 13 1/4 x 19 1/2 in. (33.66 x 49.53 cm) M.74.103a-b Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Eric Lidow View this full artwork record
The ding, a three-legged ritual vessel whose origins
predate the legends and cloudy early history of the Shang dynasty
(about 1600-1023 B.C.), was used to hold food offered to ancestral
spirits. The ding was also a ground ornament. Fantastic creatures,
symbols, even written characters recording ritual procedures were
cast into its surface.
In its typical Shang form the ding was a sturdy, lidless vessel
mounted on straight legs. Contact with other cultures introduced
new elements in its shape and ornament as well as new uses. By the
time of the Eastern Zhou dynasty (771–256 B.C.) the ding had
acquired the refined form in which it appears here. It had also been
secularized; although the Shang tradition of burying bronzes with
the dead continued, they were also presented as state gifts to foreign
rulers and preserved and handed down as symbols of family honor and
status.
The Lidow ding is related stylistically to a cache of fine bronzes
discovered near the village of Liyu (northern Shanxi province) in
1932. It exemplifies the high level of bronze casting attained by
Eastern Zhou metalsmiths despite the anarchy and constant warfare
that plagued the period. The animal forms of an earlier era have
become finely stylized and abstracted; an interlace of zoomorphic
and geometric elements covers the entire surface of the ding's body
and lid. The curvilinear pattern in an overlapping two-layer relief
contains forms suggestive of rams, birds, and felines. Restless spirals,
S-curves, triangles, and scales are composed in ribbonlike bands.
On the "knee" of each cabriole leg is an inlaid animal
mask, an image from earlier ding forms.
China Funerary Sculpture of a Pair of Officials, Middle Tang dynasty, about 700-800 Molded earthenware with incised decoration, polychrome (sancai) glaze, and traces of paint .1) 47 1/2 x 11 x 12 in. (120.65 x 27.94 x 30.48 cm): .2) 45 1/4 x 11 x 12 in. (114.94 x 27.94 x 30.48 cm) M.75.77.1-.2 Gift of Leon Lidow View this full artwork record
The interment of ceramic figures with the dead was widely practiced
in the Tang period (618–907), but the number and kinds of objects
were strictly controlled in accordance with the social position or
political status of the deceased. With imposing demeanor and resolve
these two figures represent the dignity of a nobleman. They were
once placed in a tomb containing a panoply of ceramic replicas of
officials, guardians, household retainers, animals, utensils, and
courtesans, all intended to accompany the deceased in the afterlife.
The scale of these unusually large sculptures, of a white clay
body glazed with familiar greens and ochers of Tang funerary figures,
is one indication of the dead nobleman's high rank. Their costumes—embroidered
sleeves, long skirts, sashes, elegant shoes—are courtly; the
left-hand figure is military, identified by the tabard buckled over
his shoulders. Each man stands on a rocklike pedestal, also a sign
of rank, as are their headdresses.
In keeping with their roles the figures bear stern, somewhat remote
expressions. Their full-fleshed faces, bowed mouths, aquiline noses,
elongated ears, and (in the military figure) glaring eyes are traits
that, greatly exaggerated, also appear in representations of guardian
figures possessing extraordinary powers. Their vigor and realism
exemplify the nature of the Tang dynasty, an era of political stability,
artistic achievement, and economic growth.
China, Jiangxi Province, Jingdezhen Foliated Platter (Pan) with the Eight Buddhist Symbols (Bajixiang), Flowers, and Waves, late Yuan dynasty, circa 1340-1368 Molded porcelain with blue painted decoration under clear glaze Height: 2 1/4 in. (5.9 cm); Diameter: 17 3/4 in. (45.1 cm) 55.40 Gift of the Francis E. Fowler, Jr., Foundation and the Los Angeles County Fund View this full artwork record
Flourishing in the Yuan dynasty, blue-and-white ceramic ware soon
dominated the export market; demand for it spread rapidly. A plate
of this design and size was probably made for the Near Eastern market
and would have been used on formal or ritual occasions, given as
a gift, or awarded for services. This example is typical of early
blue-and-white Yuan ceramics, with its foliated rim, unglazed base,
and freely drawn wave motif. The technique of blue underglaze with
white reserved areas, all with a clear feldspathic overglaze, emerged
from innovative Yuan ceramic experiments.
The feathery wave motif circles the plate's rim. Three additional
concentric tiers of waves give the plate's surface a lively and unpredictable
pattern. The two middle wave tiers are interrupted by six lobed cloud-collar
patterns, which echo the rim shape. Designs in the cloud collars
include lotuses, abstract foliage, melons, grapes, bamboo, and morning
glories. Some scholars believe the cloud-collar shape derives from
designs in Persian metalwork or Mongol and Tatar embroideries; others
suggest that it derives from Buddhist designs representing the four
cardinal directions.
While the overall program of the plate's design is Islamic in taste,
its primary motifs are Chinese. For example, the center medallion's
eight partitions contain auspicious Buddhist symbols and the medallion
itself represents the Buddhist Wheel of Law. Underneath the rim is
a Near Eastern scrolling floral design of lotus or aster blossoms
alternating with pomegranates.
China Oval Tray (Duoyuan Pan) with Pavilion on a Garden Terrace, Yuan dynasty, 1279-1368 Carved red lacquer on wood 1 1/4 x 9 1/4 x 6 3/8 in. (3.18 x 23.4 x 16.1 cm) M.81.125.1 Gift of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Nestley View this full artwork record
The elaborate scene on this small tray depicts a conventional gathering
of literati who have just finished a sociable banquet. Within the
pavilion a guest nods over the laden table; at left, another departs,
followed by a servant bearing a qin , a Chinese stringed
instrument. The artist delighted in natural forms, as seen in the
pine, flowers, planes, and contortions of the rockery, in the perspective
of the pavilion's facade and the furnishings within (the remains
of food are shown in the dishes), and in the band of lingzhi mushrooms
on the border. His skill in carving and pleasure in patterning pervade
the entire plate. The background diaperwork of rosettes and meanders
represents earth and sky.
Lacquer objects were made in China , Japan , and Korea from before
recorded history; Chinese palace walls dating to the fourteenth century
B.C. bore lacquer decorations. Laboriously purified from the sap
of a sumac ( Rhus verniciflua ), lacquer can carry several
pigments, but red, black, or a combination were used most frequently.
Techniques for ornamenting the surface of lacquerwork are numerous
and complex, but most often the lacquer is applied over a plain or
carved wood core, each coat requiring a long period of careful curing,
until the wood is completely covered. The built-up lacquer surface
can also be carved. Lacquer has extraordinary adhesive qualities;
once cured, it is virtually impervious to moisture, alcohol, food
acids, or decay.
Shitao China, Guangxi Province, 1642-1707 Landscapes, Qing dynasty, dated 1694 Eight-leaf album, ink and color on paper Image: 11 x 8 3/4 in. (27.94 x 22.22 cm); Mount: 13 3/8 x 10 1/2 in. (33.97 x 26.67 cm); Mat: 16 x 14 in. (40.6 x 35.6 cm) 60.29.1a-h Los Angeles County Fund View this full artwork record
The Qing dynasty in China was founded in 1644 by a coup d'etat.
Having been asked to come south to Beijing to help quell a rebellion,
the Manchus of the north obliged, then occupied the capital and proclaimed
their rule. Fortunately they greatly admired Chinese culture, adopting
its more conservative institutions and a reactionary Confucianism.
Despite this, and despite a period of civil unrest and political
realignment, ceramics, architecture, and painting flourished.
This vigor in Qing arts is nowhere better seen than in the work
of Shitao, one of the most original and formally creative artists
in all Chinese paintings. A descendant of Ming royalty, Shitao was
an accomplished calligrapher, poet, painter, and art theorist. Although
ordained a Buddhist monk, he chose travel over seclusion and enjoyed
intellectual and aesthetic relationships with other artists and poets.
Shitao maintained a determined and articulate independence from the
academicism that governed literati painting at the time. His painting
of the early 1690s shows him at the height of his powers and engaged
in experimental stylistic concerns. This scene of Mount Huang depicts
white-water rapids at the lower left, suggesting a possible viewpoint
just in front of the picture plane. Shitao then evokes a great and
precipitous leap across a mist-filled chasm to a higher view of steeply
massed peaks, a mountain ridge, and a trail where three figures meet,
their scale and detail seeming to contradict this implied distance.
There is an arresting invention in the shifting perspective. Shitao's
fluid washes, dark brushstrokes, and voids create solid, naturalistic
forms seen in a transient moment. 
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