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The horse in contemporary art
Jan30

The horse in contemporary art

Have you featured the horse in your recent artistic activity? The Editor would like to hear from you. Please send image, description, date and artist statement, if applicable. Happy New Year. Of the Horse! Click here to contact the Editor  

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Jun ware at Eskenazi
Jul25

Jun ware at Eskenazi

Eskenazi Ltd will present a selling exhibition of  16 Jun ware objects at its 10 Clifford Street, London, gallery from 31 October to 22 November 2013.  The exhibition will be a part of the 16th Asian Art in London (31 October to 9 November). Jun ware is often described as one of the ‘Five Classic Wares’ (wu da yao) of the Song dynasty (960-1279).  Jun is derived from the kiln near Juntai terrace, within the north gate of what was the...

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Jun ware at Eskenazi
Jul25

Jun ware at Eskenazi

Eskenazi Ltd will present a selling exhibition of  16 Jun ware objects at its 10 Clifford Street, London, gallery from 31 October to 22 November 2013.  The exhibition will be a part of the 16th Asian Art in London (31 October to 9 November). Jun ware is often described as one of the ‘Five Classic Wares’ (wu da yao) of the Song dynasty (960-1279).  Jun is derived from the kiln near Juntai terrace, within the north gate of what was the...

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Lost Generation: Luo Zhenyu, Qing Loyalists and the Formation of Modern Chinese Culture
Dec21

Lost Generation: Luo Zhenyu, Qing Loyalists and the Formation of Modern Chinese Culture

Lost Generation: Luo Zhenyu, Qing Loyalists and the Formation of Modern Chinese Culture is a Saffron Asian Art and Society Series book (ISBN 9781872843377, 2012) edited by Yang Chia-Ling 楊佳玲 and Roderick Whitfield. You may buy this book here The book investigates the roles as politician, antiquarian, art dealer, and publisher, of Luo Zhenyu 羅振玉 (1866~1940), who, together with his circle of Qing loyalists (遺老), established modern...

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The Meaning of the Graph Yi and Its Implications for Shang Belief and Art
Jan15

The Meaning of the Graph Yi and Its Implications for Shang Belief and Art

This book, an East Asia Journal monograph, uses a combination of written and graphic data to identify the meaning of the so-called taotie mask and the basis of Shang religion. By utilising paleographic and representational evidence, this book puts into perspective that Shang belief was not limited to the worship of royal dead ancestor spirits. Buy this book About The Meaning of the Graph Yi… In a departure from previous...

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