Non Western

Emperor Scholar Artisan Monk: The Creative Personality in Chinese Works of Art

1 paperback (288 pages, 285 x 209, 170 colour illustrations) with 3 hardback books of plates
PRICE: £85.00
ISBN: No isbn

 

The second in the series of catalogues and exhibitions on the endlessly diverse subject of artworks which reflect the culture of the Chinese scholar class and some of the individuals who comprised it (see also In Scholars' Taste and The Literati Mode) . Amongst the works presented here are a group of signed and superb rhinoceros horn carvings; imposing stone desk objects, including unusual and fine examples by metalworker Hu Wen-ming; an interesting group of Chin Hsi-yai bamboo carvings from the carver's own collection; and a group of imperially-related objects centering around the K'and-hsi Emperor's Tour of the South handscroll. These works have an intellectual content and a refined aesthetic intent, making them more interesting than and consequently superior to simple craftsmanship.

Three hardback fold-out volumes accompany the catalogue:

Prince I's Lan-T'ing Ink Rubbing Compilation (1592)

Beautiful Scenery of Peach Blossom Spring (1638)

The Seventh Nan-Hsün-T'u Handscroll: From Wu-Hsi to Suchou (1691–1698)

Distributed for Sydney L. Moss Ltd., London

Specialists in Chinese and Japanese Art


Remembering Forward: Paintings of Australian Aborigines Since 1960

Remembering Forward presents works by nine of the most prominent Australian Aboriginal artists: Paddy Bedford, Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Queenie McKenzie, Dorothy Napangardi, Rover Thomas, Ronnie Tjampitjinpa, Clifford Possum Tjapaltjarri, Tim Leura Tjapaltjarri and Turkey Tolson Tjupurrula. More

Food for the Flames: Idols and Missionaries in Central Polynesia

Twenty-five years after Captain Cook, the London Missionary Society sent its first representatives to the South Seas. Their goal was to eradicate heathenism and idolatry, but unwittingly, they became agents for the preservation of Polynesian culture through their diligent recording of language and religious practices. They even preserved a number of religious artifacts, which they sent back to England for exhibition in the Mission Museum in London. This book focuses on these artifacts, the idols that avoided the flames. More

Provenance: Twelve Collectors of Ethnographic Art in England 1760–1990

Detailed biographies describe the lives of twelve collectors of tribal art in Britain, active between 1770 and 1990. These men were rarely field collectors and only occasional travellers, but they were vigorous hunters, for whom the pursuit, handling and possession of such objects was what mattered. More

MESROP OF XIZAN: An Armenian Master of the Seventeenth Century

Illuminator, painter, scribe, clerk, teacher, doctor of theology, restorer and binder, Mesrop was one of the greatest Armenian artists of his and following generations. He was prolific, working for at least forty-two years in Sos (New Julfa) from 1608 to 1651. This book will be the first serious study of the forty-six of his manuscripts that have survived. The focus of the book, however, is The Four Gospels, one of the few manuscripts painted entirely by Mesrop’s hand and one of the most extensively illuminated in his oeuvre. More

Hakob’s Gospels: The Life and Work of An Armenian Artist of the Sixteenth Century

In the winter of 1586, Hakob Jughayets'i, one of Armenia's most celebrated illuminators, completed work on a Gospel Book with an extensive and extraordinary programme of narrative miniatures and marginal figures. More