Of Earth and Fire: The T.T.Tsui Collection of Chinese Art in the National Gallery of Australia
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Maud Girard-Geslan
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 68
China is the only civilization in the world known to have a total cultural continuity from the third millennium BCE to modern times. This is the catalogue of the gift made to the National Gallery of Australia by T.T. Tsui, which consists of a collection of 31 Chinese decorative ceramic articles ranging from the Xia dynasty to the People's Republic of China. Arts and crafts have received much attention in China, hence the existence of a huge reservoir of skilled and dedicated craftsmen throughout its entire history. Chinese kings and emperors were patrons of the arts and dedicated huge resources to express the genius and ideology of their times and of their aims. Aristocrats and merchants, literati and eunuchs, wives and concubines could all be avid collectors, as of course were the royalty and the rich of Europe. All these facts have resulted in the creation and survival of the ceramics catalogued here.
Author: Maud Girard-Geslan
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 68
China is the only civilization in the world known to have a total cultural continuity from the third millennium BCE to modern times. This is the catalogue of the gift made to the National Gallery of Australia by T.T. Tsui, which consists of a collection of 31 Chinese decorative ceramic articles ranging from the Xia dynasty to the People's Republic of China. Arts and crafts have received much attention in China, hence the existence of a huge reservoir of skilled and dedicated craftsmen throughout its entire history. Chinese kings and emperors were patrons of the arts and dedicated huge resources to express the genius and ideology of their times and of their aims. Aristocrats and merchants, literati and eunuchs, wives and concubines could all be avid collectors, as of course were the royalty and the rich of Europe. All these facts have resulted in the creation and survival of the ceramics catalogued here.
Description
NB: This is a secondhand book in very good condition. See our FAQs for more information. Please note that the jacket image is indicative only. A description of our secondhand books is not always available. Please contact us if you have a question about this title.
Author: Maud Girard-Geslan
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 68
China is the only civilization in the world known to have a total cultural continuity from the third millennium BCE to modern times. This is the catalogue of the gift made to the National Gallery of Australia by T.T. Tsui, which consists of a collection of 31 Chinese decorative ceramic articles ranging from the Xia dynasty to the People's Republic of China. Arts and crafts have received much attention in China, hence the existence of a huge reservoir of skilled and dedicated craftsmen throughout its entire history. Chinese kings and emperors were patrons of the arts and dedicated huge resources to express the genius and ideology of their times and of their aims. Aristocrats and merchants, literati and eunuchs, wives and concubines could all be avid collectors, as of course were the royalty and the rich of Europe. All these facts have resulted in the creation and survival of the ceramics catalogued here.
Author: Maud Girard-Geslan
Format: Paperback
Number of Pages: 68
China is the only civilization in the world known to have a total cultural continuity from the third millennium BCE to modern times. This is the catalogue of the gift made to the National Gallery of Australia by T.T. Tsui, which consists of a collection of 31 Chinese decorative ceramic articles ranging from the Xia dynasty to the People's Republic of China. Arts and crafts have received much attention in China, hence the existence of a huge reservoir of skilled and dedicated craftsmen throughout its entire history. Chinese kings and emperors were patrons of the arts and dedicated huge resources to express the genius and ideology of their times and of their aims. Aristocrats and merchants, literati and eunuchs, wives and concubines could all be avid collectors, as of course were the royalty and the rich of Europe. All these facts have resulted in the creation and survival of the ceramics catalogued here.
Of Earth and Fire: The T.T.Tsui Collection of Chinese Art in the National Gallery of Australia
$15.00