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9780295747231 Academic Inspection Copy

Great Qing

Painting in China, 1644-1911
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Addressing the previous lack of a comprehensive English-language study of Qing painting, art historian Claudia Brown's account ranges from the tumultuous Ming-Qing transition to the end of imperial rule. In response to omissions in previous treatments, she examines major influences shaping the period and explores the relationship between painting and mapmaking, the role of patrons and collectors, printmaking and publishing, religious themes, and Western influences. With more than two hundred color illustrations, Great Qing highlights fine examples of Qing painting in American museums, works from all regions of China, and paintings by women. Brown's gorgeous, attentively rendered survey covers three centuries of momentous change and is intended for general audiences as well as art collectors, museum curators, and students and historians of Chinese art, culture, and society.
Claudia Brown is professor of art history at Arizona State University and research curator for Asian art at the Phoenix Art Museum. She is the primary author and editor of Weaving China's Past: The Amy S. Clague Collection of Chinese Textiles and Minol Araki and coeditor of Buddhist Manuscript Cultures: Knowledge, Rituals, and Art.
A major overview of painting in China's last dynasty
"If one had to choose an introduction to Qing painting, Brown's Great Qing, with its capacious scope, would be it." (Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies) "Brown's chapter on women artists is particularly valuable, as it presents one of the most thorough accounts of seventeenth- through twenty-first-century female painters in English. The sheer volume of artists discussed in this work is unprecedented in the field." (Choice)
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