"Portrait of the Yongzheng
Emperor's Concubine at Leisure," early Eighteenth Century,
unidentified court artist, China. Ink and color on silk.
SALEM, MASS.
Over 200 exceptional Chinese imperial objects are presented in
the exhibition "Secret World of the Forbidden City" currently at
the Peabody Essex Museum. "Forbidden City" refers to the
Emperor's compound of 180 acres within the capital city of
Beijing.
During the Ming and Qing Dynasties, an unauthorized person found
within the imperial city could be executed. The Forbidden City
was enclosed within its own city wall. At the center of the
compound were Halls of Harmony and the Palace of Heavenly Purity.
Offices and housing for bureaucrats, security forces, craftsmen,
and servants were located within the perimeter of the wall.
Initially, the Qing Dynasty was served by 9,000 eunuchs, or
castrated male servants.
Visitor experiences of this show vary greatly depending upon
one's knowledge of and interest in Chinese history. Those who
ignore history can enjoy a stunning collection of opulent
objects. Visitors who read the historical placards will gain
considerable insight into Chinese imperial rule, history and
culture.
Standing Meitreya, unidentified artist, Eighteenth Century,
China.
The visual experience of this exhibition is enhanced by the
opportunity to view many objects in the round since they are
displayed on individual pedestals. Some larger objects such as a
pair of armor suits displayed on mannequins were installed in
corner windows that afforded 270-degree viewing.
Museums of the Exhibition
After the final emperor abdicated in 1911, the imperial
collection remained within the Forbidden City. Today the Palace
Museum encompasses the entire Forbidden City, and owns a
collection of more than one million imperial objects.
Some buildings are open as exhibition galleries while others
serve as museum offices, laboratories, and storage facilities.
The Palace Museum director recently commented that, although he
has worked all his adult life at the museum, there are still
objects that he has never seen.
The Palace Museum is China's largest museum, and a favorite
destination of tourists visiting China. Tour buses typically
schedule four-hour visits to the museum. The Palace Museum has
lent exhibitions in the past, but the exhibit currently at the
Peabody Essex Museum is the largest touring exhibition ever lent
by the Palace Museum.
The initial American venue of the exhibition was the Bowers
Museum of Cultural Art in Santa Ana, Calif., where the
installation was a joint undertaking of the Palace Museum and the
Bowers Museum. The Bowers Museum published an extensive catalog
of the exhibition.
The Peabody Essex Museum is the only East Coast installation of
the exhibition. Since the Peabody has more gallery space than the
Bowers Museum, this installation includes 30 large objects,
particularly scrolls, which were not displayed in Santa Ana.
Artifacts Reveal Qing Dynasty
Exhibition co-curator Bruce MacLaren commented, "Chinese history
has been marked by alternating periods of domestic and foreign
rule. The Forbidden City was built by the Ming emperors who came
from the Hun people, China's largest ethnic population. After
ruling for almost 300 years (1368-1644), Ming authority was
threatened by rebellion within China. Leaders sought outside
military assistance from Manchuria. The Manchurians quelled the
unrest, but established one of their youths as the new emperor of
China."
MacLaren continued, "The Manchus were the sort of nomadic people
that the Great Wall was supposed to keep out of China. They had a
different religion, culture, and lifestyle. Manchus toiled as
herdsmen, hunters, and farmers, and were accomplished horsemen
and warriors. Their language was totally different than Chinese,
and the written form of their language was invented late, about
1550.
"Depending upon the system used for transforming Chinese words to
English, one might sometimes see Qing Dynasty and other times
Ching Dynasty. They are one and the same. Qing emperors ruled
from 1644 to 1911."
The Forbidden City was a critical asset for maintaining Qing
control over China. It resembled a fort or castle in that it had
a 32-foot high city wall, but was grander than any caste. For
example, it is about 20 times larger than the Vatican and almost
30 times larger than the Kremlin.
The Forbidden City also protected the privacy of the Manchu
enclave that practiced a Manchurian shamanistic religion and
spoke the Manchurian language beyond the view of the Chinese
populace.
When Manchu leaders seized the imperial throne from the Ming
emperors, the Forbidden City had a long-established tradition as
the seat of power and bureaucratic operation.
There was no need to invent a new governmental organization.
Provincial leaders and trading nations had established cycles for
paying tribute to the emperor at the imperial palace. The Ming
bureaucratic organization worked fine, and Qing emperors adopted
it.
Once in power, Qing emperors adopted the trappings of traditional
emperors to convince the Chinese people that their rule was
justified. New emperors strove to meet established expectations
for "the Son of Heaven." To achieve expectations, the emperor
needed to become the greatest scholar in China, a leading
worshiper in the Confucian and Buddhist religions, and China's
greatest art patron.
The Emperor Kangxi, who served from 1663 to 1723, met traditional
Chinese expectations of an emperor while retaining Manchu
traditions. Calligraphy was considered the highest form of
Chinese art, and the emperor created poetry that he wrote in
stylized calligraphy.
The exhibition includes a painting of the Emperor Kangxi at a
writing desk holding a calligraphy brush probably intended to
document that he was a great scholar.
Another painting of Kangxi in the exhibition demonstrates the
pragmatic approach of the Qing emperors. Curator MacLaren
commented, "Qing emperors practiced assimilation, isolation, and
importation. Even in the Seventeenth Century they were importing
a considerable European influence through Jesuits who worked
sometimes as artists within the Forbidden City. This scroll
painting shows that Kangxi assimilated Chinese clothing and owned
a scholarly library in keeping with expectations for the Son of
Heaven. Yet it also shows the European influence in the binding
of the books, the painting of the book shelves with one-point
perspective, and in the modeling of Kangxi's face."
Religious artifacts in the exhibition also demonstrate
assimilation, isolation, and importation. Qing emperors practiced
their traditional shamanistic Manchu religion in the isolated
confines of the Forbidden City where the majority Chinese would
not be offended.
Qing emperors also imported some rituals of Tibetan and Mongolian
Buddhism. One related artifact on view is a skull bowl whose
bottom half was made from the skull of a deceased priest. The
base and lid were fashioned from gilded bronze.
The Qing emperors also assimilated Confucian teachings and
mainstream Buddhism and were extremely conspicuous in related
spending. For example, the exhibition includes a 20-inch high
statue of Maitreya, the Buddha of the future. However, in an
ostentatious display, the statue was fashioned from over 42
pounds of pure gold rather than in gilded bronze.
Members of the Manchu court sometimes rebuke Chinese traditions.
For example, women refused to have their feet bound in the
Chinese manner. As a compromise, they adopted platform shoes.
Garments concealed the tops of these shoes so unbound feet did
not offend the Chinese populace. These shoes also generated the
hobbled walking motion that was esteemed in China at that time. A
pair of these wooden shoes with beautiful enamel decoration is
included in the exhibition.
A major American art challenge of the late Nineteenth Century was
the integration of Asian and European approaches to painting.
This exhibit offers an interesting early Eighteenth Century
solution. The image created with ink and watercolor on a silk
scroll depicts the emperor hunting stags. The artist was Guiseppe
Castiglione (1688-1766), a Jesuit from Milan, Italy. He reached
China in 1715, and, as a court painter he adopted the name Chin
Nome Lang Shining.
In this painting, the artist presented the emperor, his horse,
and stag in a modeled, realistic European manner. All other
aspects were presented in the more poetic Chinese manner. In
contemporary China, portraits in this manner were criticized
since they did not meet traditional Chinese portraiture
standards. There, the measure of a portrait was the extent to
which it captured the inner essence of a person, not whether it
captured a physical likeness.
An interesting fantasy history painting on exhibit is entitled
"10,000 Nations Coming to Pay Tribute." The painting offers a
1737 bird's-eye view of the Forbidden City's central axis. At the
edge of the forefront, the Meridian Gate can be seen. The central
foreground depicted the Golden River Bridge and then the Gate of
Supreme Harmony. Beyond the gate, the major buildings were the
Hall of Complete Harmony and Hall of Preserving Harmony.
The fantasy was that all nations were paying tribute at a single
time. In practice, ambassadors from a single nation came for an
imperial audience and to pay tribute. Among the 10,000
contingents standing in line is a team of American colonists
outfitted in tri-cornered hats.
Imperial Workshops
Chinese emperors traditionally were the foremost supporters of
the arts in China, and their patronage was channeled through a
series of imperial workshops. Some craftsmen had workshops and
housing located to the rear right side of Forbidden City. Other
imperial workshops were located in distant provinces with
traditions for producing certain types of crafts.
For example, the imperial porcelain kilns were in Jingdezhen
where there was a natural supply of kaolin clay. Imperial robes
were produced at the imperial textile workshop located in
southern China.
Ming emperors recruited the finest craftsmen, and supported their
practice of using the finest materials. Many of those workshops
were in place when the Qing emperors ascended to the throne.
Others such as the pottery at Jingdezhen were disrupted by civil
unrest associated with the fall of the Ming Dynasty, but the new
rulers restored their production.
At the dawn of the Qing Dynasty, the six-year old emperor and his
court of herdsmen advisors were probably naïve about the
sophisticated arts of China. It is likely that craftsmen and
bureaucrats rushed to provide an education about decoration and
design. It also appears that the Qing emperors developed their
own artistic taste and that sometimes did not include an
appreciation for subtle design cherished among the most refined
Chinese.
For example, the imperial alms bowl on view was produced from
iron and then heavily gilded and decorated with removable dragons
and fine tracery. Traditionally, Chinese alms bowls were designed
to be consistent with their purpose and were crafted from either
wood or undecorated iron. Against that standard, the glittering,
reticulated alms bowl of the Qing emperors was garishly nouveau
riche. A broader view across the entire Forbidden City exhibition
demonstrates the ostentatious quality of nouveau riche taste.
Qing emperors also supported innovation in the arts. As noted
with the Kangxi portrait, they supported the incorporation of
European one-point perspective and modeling of figures by the use
of highlights and shadows.
Another craft innovation supported by the Qing rulers was the use
of a new deep rose color in porcelain. Pottery decorators painted
porcelain bodies with the new glaze containing a colloidal
suspension of gold. When kilns were fired, the glaze turned rosy
red. Chemically, the new glaze was related to the colloidal
suspension used to produce ruby red glass. The glaze was created
in Europe, and Jesuits working in the Forbidden City sometimes
assisted with the importation of the glaze.
In the exhibition, the deep rose glaze can be seen on a double
vase with refined decoration. This vase is also more refined than
most pottery in the exhibition in that the overall decoration is
less busy, the primary motifs have a lyrical calligraphic flow,
and yet within small elements there is precise detail.
Qing emperors also supported the creation of great narrative
scrolls. For example, a series of 12 scrolls was created to
document one visit by Emperor Qianlong to southern China. During
his 60-year reign, the emperor journeyed only three times through
the southern provinces, but these historic trips demonstrated his
interest in the area and also provided an opportunity to
peacefully parade military might. The series of scrolls became a
visual history of one sojourn as well as an art project.
The exhibit presents one 30-foot scroll from the series that
depicts emperor's visit to the town of Shaoxing. The beautiful
scroll reads from right to left with a single, continuous
landscape. The landscape has alternating sections of populated
scenes and unpopulated scenes. Unpopulated scenes serve as
interludes, and the populated scenes show a sequence of imperial
touring.
Within any particular scene, the emperor is easily located since
he is twice as large as all other humans, and he is depicted with
more vivid pigments. Usually he is toward the center of the scene
and the crowd is set back a bit away from him. Details of the
scene are so specifically rendered that the viewer can recognize
products sold in each pictured shop, such as pottery or fish.
This permanent scroll was produced after the imperial entourage
returned to the Forbidden City. The extraordinary detail and
individually rendering of streets, walls, and other landscape
elements suggests that a huge number of field sketches were
produced, and one wonders if those are still extant.
Objects From Abroad
The imperial collection includes a wealth of objects produced
outside China that were presented as gifts to emperors. These
span the spectrum of crafted and manufactured objects, but there
are a disproportionate number of elaborately engineered
mechanisms and scientific instruments. Antiques and The
Arts Weekly had the opportunity to informally discuss this
concentration with some members of the Palace Museum staff. They
indicated that all the emperors had deep interests in science and
technology, and emperors were particularly pleased to receive
gifts in those areas.
Scientific instruments on exhibit include an array of
astronomical and navigational devices. These appear to be top
grade manufactured examples. While one telescope was encrusted
with jewels, most instruments were engraved in the manner
acceptable to scientists of their time. They had some small areas
of decorative scrolling, but most engraving marked functional
lines and numbers. This was the one group of objects in the
exhibition that did not have the ostentatious decoration usually
associated with Qing emperors.
In contrast, gifts with elaborate mechanisms were decorated in
every conceivable manner and on all possible surfaces. These were
literally objects with all the bells and whistles. For example, a
gilded English clock had a dial with five hands and a case with
three different mechanisms. One mechanism presented a series of
scenes on the front façade of the cabinet. Above the cabinet, a
complex carousel of figures rotated. Projecting tall above each
corner was a flower that rotated while opening and closing.
One curiosity among the mechanized objects was the inclusion of
one clock in the French style that was actually produced in
China. It even featured a dial with a 12-hour European dial with
Roman numerals.
Manchu Objects
Objects of Manchu inspiration were some of the most fascinating
works in the exhibition. As hunters and warriors, the Qing
emperors were outstanding archers. One display includes a bow,
arrows, quiver and bow holder. Earlier Manchu forms of the bow
and bow holder were probably robustly sculpted and durable, but
from course materials embellished with restrained decoration.
After the Manchu ascended to the throne, money was lavished on
decorating the emperor's hunting equipment. His bow holder has a
needlepoint body that appears as dense as an Oriental rug. The
outer gray background field was created with silver thread, and
the inner field was orange. The floral design was worked in
green, red, and pink threads. The strap of the bow holder was
decorated with gold mounts studded with jewels.
The bow set, swords, and knives exhibited robust energy that
worked well with highly crafted surfaces. Traditional folk forms
were effectively integrated with strong decoration. Such striking
combinations punctuated the exhibition with unanticipated
delights.
"Secret World of the Forbidden City" is on view until
September 23. The Peabody Essex Museum is at East India Square.
Hours are Monday to Saturday 9 am to 5 pm, and Sunday noon to 5
pm. For information, 800-745-4054.