Events

The Taiping Rebellion: The Biography of the Battle Paintings Commissioned by Empress Dowager Cixi

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Date:

24 Oct 2014

Time:

2:00-3:30pm

Venue:

Conference Room, 2/F, East Wing, Art Museum, Institute of Chinese Studies

Speaker(s):

Dr. Zhang Hongxing(Senior Curator, Victoria and Albert Museum)

Enquiries:

3943 5536 (Ms. Li)

Synopsis of Lecture:

This lecture relates the forgotten story of a remarkable series of battle paintings, works that from its birth out of the world’s bloodiest civil war Taiping Rebellion became one of the grandest art projects ever to be commissioned by the Manchu dynasty. It traces the paintings’ beginnings amidst the post-war restoration efforts of the 1870s and 80s, and going on to explore the changes of commissioning procedures as different views were clashing on how the war should be remembered. It ends with a discussion on the fate of the paintings as a symbol of Empress Dowager’s corrupted government, when Japan defeated Chinese naval forces in 1895, and subsequently western powers occupied Beijing in 1900.

Remarks:

Language:English