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Thanks to generous support of the Wellcome Trust, this volume is available in Open Access.
Thanks to generous support of the Wellcome Trust, this volume is available in Open Access.
mass have evolved to meet the tastes of patrons and to signal the role of their occupants,
whilst of course ensuring structural robustness. However, the visual impact of these
structures comes chiefly from their ceramic ornament. Indeed, travellers through the
centuries would first have glimpsed a distant city by the sunlight glinting from its tallest
rooftops. These important ceramics can sometimes engage fully with established
disciplines such as architecture or fine ceramics, but in Colours and Contrast Clarence
Eng cogently argues that they be studied in their own right. He introduces the aesthetics,
history and technology of Chinese architectural ceramics, demonstrates that similar
levels of skilled expertise were applied both to glazed and unglazed ornament, and
describes their special contribution to structures designed primarily to delight the
viewer, such as screen walls and pagodas.
mass have evolved to meet the tastes of patrons and to signal the role of their occupants,
whilst of course ensuring structural robustness. However, the visual impact of these
structures comes chiefly from their ceramic ornament. Indeed, travellers through the
centuries would first have glimpsed a distant city by the sunlight glinting from its tallest
rooftops. These important ceramics can sometimes engage fully with established
disciplines such as architecture or fine ceramics, but in Colours and Contrast Clarence
Eng cogently argues that they be studied in their own right. He introduces the aesthetics,
history and technology of Chinese architectural ceramics, demonstrates that similar
levels of skilled expertise were applied both to glazed and unglazed ornament, and
describes their special contribution to structures designed primarily to delight the
viewer, such as screen walls and pagodas.
Huang engages with prominent Chinese intellectuals, writers, artists and filmmakers, including Ba Jin, Han Shaogong, Hong Ying, Zhang Xiaogang, Jiang Wen and Ann Hui.
Huang engages with prominent Chinese intellectuals, writers, artists and filmmakers, including Ba Jin, Han Shaogong, Hong Ying, Zhang Xiaogang, Jiang Wen and Ann Hui.
The essays explore the dynamic concept of "kaleidoscopic modernity" and offer individual case studies on the rise of "art" photography, the appeals of slick patent medicines, the resilience of female artists, the allure of aviation celebrities, the feistiness of women athletes, representations of modern masculinity, efforts to regulate the female body and female sexuality, and innovative research that locates the stunning impact of Liangyou in the broader context of related cultural developments in Tokyo and Seoul.
Contributors include: Paul W. Ricketts, Timothy J. Shea, Emily Baum, Maura Elizabeth Cunningham, Jun Lei, Amy O'Keefe, Hongjian Wang, Ha Yoon Jung, Lesley W. Ma, Tongyun Yin, and Wang Chuchu.
The essays explore the dynamic concept of "kaleidoscopic modernity" and offer individual case studies on the rise of "art" photography, the appeals of slick patent medicines, the resilience of female artists, the allure of aviation celebrities, the feistiness of women athletes, representations of modern masculinity, efforts to regulate the female body and female sexuality, and innovative research that locates the stunning impact of Liangyou in the broader context of related cultural developments in Tokyo and Seoul.
Contributors include: Paul W. Ricketts, Timothy J. Shea, Emily Baum, Maura Elizabeth Cunningham, Jun Lei, Amy O'Keefe, Hongjian Wang, Ha Yoon Jung, Lesley W. Ma, Tongyun Yin, and Wang Chuchu.
Showing that the culture of this period was characterized by a high degree of formal looseness, she argues that such aesthetic fluidity was created in response to historical conditions of violence and widespread displacement. Moreover, she illustrates how the innovative formal experiments of uprooted writers and artists expanded the geographic and aesthetic boundaries of Chinese modernism far beyond the coastal cities of Shanghai and Beijing.
Showing that the culture of this period was characterized by a high degree of formal looseness, she argues that such aesthetic fluidity was created in response to historical conditions of violence and widespread displacement. Moreover, she illustrates how the innovative formal experiments of uprooted writers and artists expanded the geographic and aesthetic boundaries of Chinese modernism far beyond the coastal cities of Shanghai and Beijing.