Having always vowed to retire after ruling for sixty years (out of respect for his grandfather the Kangxi emperor, who had reigned for sixty-one), the Qianlong emperor ordered a grand complex to be built for his retirement deep within the Forbidden City, the home of the Chinese emperors since 1420. Completed in 1776, after years of dedicated labor by builders and artisans, the complex had at its heart a two-acre garden compound featuring twenty-seven lavishly decorated buildings. In its rockeries, naturalistic spaces, and exquisite interiors, filled with objects chosen by the Qianlong emperor for his own personal enjoyment, he intended to devote himself to his Buddhist studies, write poetry, and contemplate his role in the workings of the cosmos.
While the primary function of the garden was contemplative, the buildings also served as places to display this imperial connoisseur’s massive collection of ancient and contemporary art. At his bidding, his ateliers of highly specialized designers and artisans created some of the finest examples of Qianlong era architectural design, furnishings, wall decorations, and trompe-l’oeil paintings. In accordance with his meticulous directives, the rooms showcased a wide variety of artistic techniques. One chamber contained latticed partition panels set with cloisonné ornaments, while in another, colorful porcelain medallions embellished the partition panels (see Fig. 6). In several, bamboo thread marquetry, a highly-refined technique of slicing bamboo into slender threads and then adhering them in complex geometric patterns, decorated lattice panels and furniture (see Fig. 9).
You are watching: The Emperor’s Secret Garden
Read more : How to Cook Corn on the Cob (6 Ways!)
Walls and ceilings were decorated with trompe-l’oeil paintings, a technique brought to China from Europe by the missionary artist Giuseppe Castiglione (1688- 1766), who arrived in Beijing in 1715 and served three emperors as a court painter. The realism of his murals so astonished his Chinese patrons that the Qianlong emperor commanded Castiglione to teach his techniques, including the use of three-point perspective and the effects of light on volume, to the Chinese artists in the imperial atelier. Castiglione died several years before the emperor began planning his garden, so it was his Chinese disciples who rendered the surprisingly three-dimensional effects portrayed throughout the garden interiors (see Fig. 9).
Among the four trompe-l’oeil murals that survive is a lovely interior scene of palace women and children celebrating the Chinese New Year, which is applied to the rear wall of the elegantly named Bower of Purest Jade (see Fig. 1). Painted to imitate the wallpaper on the walls and ceiling of the room, the mural seems to add ten feet of depth to the small chamber. The viewer can almost hear the cheerful assembly. At the left, several children are glimpsed just beyond a moon gate, picking branches of plum blossoms—a much-beloved flower in China that blooms in late winter and symbolizes purity and the coming of spring (see Fig. 3). In the room other children place flowers in a vase, another plays with incense next to a brazier, and two others heat water for tea on a portable stove. The favorite child is certainly the one dressed in his New Year’s Day finery, including a hat decorated with a gold Buddha, while palace women attired in fine silk-embroidered robes and exquisitely jeweled headpieces entertain him with a rattle.
Like the rooms of the Qianlong garden, the room within the mural is luxuriously appointed with beautiful furnishings, architectural elements, and paintings. Though the perspective technique employed to create the work was European in origin, the paintings that fill the walls and panels of the room are all in the traditional Chinese style. The mural’s designer invited the finest artists in the imperial atelier to contribute the paintings within the scene. Each artist who produced a work on the partition panels in the mural signed his name, adding the character chen—used only when painting for an emperor—and placing his red seal below his name. One of the best-known artists in the atelier, Yao Wenhan, was invited to create the New Year’s painting hanging on the back wall, and a high governmental official made the celebratory calligraphic couplets that flank it.
Read more : 9 quick steps for storing fresh carrots from the garden
The room within the mural, with its wallpaper, furniture, decorated partitions, paintings, textiles, and an altar table covered with ornamental antiques and objets d’art, offers a charmingly animated vision of how rooms of the Qianlong Garden may have appeared when the emperor last passed through them more than two hundred years ago.
A selection of the furnishings, wall decorations, and architectural and garden elements that remained in place in the Qianlong Garden until they were removed for conservation in 2007 will be displayed in public for the first time anywhere in a monumental traveling exhibition, The Emperor’s Private Paradise: Treasures from the Forbidden City, which opens at the Peabody Essex Museum on September 14. The exhibition was created in partnership with the Palace Museum and in cooperation with the World Monuments Fund.
NANCY BERLINER is the curator of Chinese art at the Peabody Essex Museum.
Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Garden news
For all my beauties with dark inner thighs, armpits, bikini area and spots, etc, this…
Are you a passionate cook aspiring to embark on a rewarding culinary journey? Whether you're…
Discover the perfect wall colors to complement your grey kitchen cabinets, creating a harmonious and…
Generally, a 10×10 kitchen remodel ranges from $15,000 to $45,000, but several factors could cause…
Sleek and durable, quartz countertops are the latest trend in kitchen and bathroom renovation. Comparable…
IKEA kitchens are designed to be as simple as possible to assemble and install yourself.…