The eternal feast.Banqueting in Chinese Art from the 10th to the 14th Century

Autor:
Kwok, Zoe S.
Editorial:
Yale
ISBN
9780300246902
Idioma
Inglés
Fecha de Publicación
2020
Nº de páginas
196
Formato
Tapa dura
Disponibilidad:
Consultar disponibilidad
55,00€

An overview of Chinese culture, particularly visions of life and the afterlife, told through feast imagery from three historically transformative dynasties

Feasting was an important social and ritual activity in China beginning in the Bronze Age, and cuisine retains a strong cultural significance to this day. This book focuses on feasting in the 10th through 14th centuries, examining Chinese paintings of feasts from the Song (960 1279), Liao (907 1125), and Yuan (1279 1368) dynasties. Feast images, more so than works from any other painting genre, depict scenes from the past, the present, and the afterlife alike. More specifically, as author Zoe S. Kwok explains in the book's insightful text, they portray a continuum between life and what lies beyond it; this volume is the first to make such a connection. Full-color plates highlight a rare group of paintings as well as complementary ceramic, metal, stone, and textile objects, and the nearly fifty individual catalogue entries touch on diverse topics not only food and drink but dance, music, costume, burial practices, artistic patronage, and more.

Zoe S. Kwok is assistant curator of Asian art at the Princeton University Art Museum.

EXHIBITION SCHEDULE

Princeton University Art Museum
(October 19, 2019 February 16, 2020)