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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:New Directions in Art History: Mei Mei Rado "European Tapestries at the Qing Court:  Global Textiles and A Cross-cultural Medium"
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SUMMARY:New Directions in Art History: Mei Mei Rado "European Tapestries at the Qing Court:  Global Textiles and A Cross-cultural Medium"
DESCRIPTION:<p>	<drupal-media data-entity-type="media" data-entity-uuid="8a0c64bd-fc7d-448e-9923-469a8a71c237" alt="mei mei lecture poster" data-view-mode="hwp_full_width"></drupal-media></p><p>	 </p><p>	<strong>European Tapestries at the Qing Court:  Global Textiles and A Cross-cultural Medium</strong></p><p>	<span style='NewRoman",serif'>This presentation draws from my forthcoming book </span><em>The Empire’s New Cloth: Cross-cultural Textiles at the Qing Court</em><span style='NewRoman",serif'> (Yale University Press, early 2025). L</span><span style='NewRoman",serif'>arge-scale pictorial tapestries ranked among the most precious art forms in the early modern period. </span><span style='NewRoman",serif'>While </span><span style='NewRoman",serif'>their circulations and functions among European courts have been well studied, less known are their journeys to China and subsequent roles in stimulating new developments in Qing imperial arts. The first part of this talk uncovers the history of French tapestries that entered the Qing court during the eighteenth century as diplomatic gifts and trade goods, including the first and second <em>Tentures chinoises</em> woven by the Beauvais Manufactory and the <em>Tenture des Indes</em> made by the Gobelins Manufactory. Their trajectories reconstructed from both the French and Qing sides offer a window into the complexity of global networks and contingency of cultural encounters. These tapestries’ themes, marked by idealized exoticism compressing distance and time, functioned as a kind of diplomatic <em>lingua franca</em> adaptable to express divergent cultural and political visions. The second part of this presentation examines how </span><span style='NewRoman",serif'>European tapestries gave rise to a new type of textile art form in the Qing imperial workshops and an innovative mode for furnishing the palace interiors. The medium’s architectonic tension and interactive visual potential enabled the Qianlong emperor to envision his own physical presence in relation to the tapestry in space and offered him new ways to reenact narratives charged with imperial significance. </span></p><p>	 </p><p>	 </p>
LOCATION:485 Broadway Lower Lecture Hall
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20231107T230000Z
DTEND:20231108T003000Z
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