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ISBN: HB: 9781606064740

Getty Publications

April 2016

192 pp.

25x15 cm

colour and black&white illus.

HB:
£45,00
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Shining Inheritance

Italian Painters at the Qing Court, 1699-1812

During Qing dynasty China, Italian artists were hired through Jesuit missionaries by the imperial workshops in Beijing. In "The Shining Inheritance: Italian Painters at the Qing Court, 1699 1812", Marco Musillo considers the professional adaptations and pictorial modifications to Chinese traditions that allowed three of these Italian painters Giovanni Gherardini (1655 – ca. 1729), Giuseppe Castiglione (1688-1766), and Giuseppe Panzi (1734-1812) to work within the Chinese cultural sphere from 1699, when Gherardini arrived in China, to 1812, the year of Panzi'sdeath. Musillo focuses especially on the long career and influence of Castiglione (whose Chinese name was Lang Shining), who worked in Beijing for more than fifty years. Serving three Qing emperors, he was actively engaged in the pictorial discussions at court. "The Shining Inheritance" perceptively explores how each painter'slevel of professional artistic training affected his understanding, selection, and translation of the Chinese pictorial traditions. Musillo further demonstrates how this East-West artistic exchange challenged the dogma of European universality through a professional dialogue that became part of established workshop routines. The cultural elements, procedures, and artistic languages of both China and Italy were strategically played against each other in negotiating the successes and failures of the Italian painters in Beijing. Musillo'ssubtle analysis offers a compelling methodological model for an increasingly global field of art history.

About the Author

Marco Musillo is a research fellow at the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florence.