A Perpetual Fire

豆瓣
A Perpetual Fire

登录后可管理标记收藏。

ISBN: 9789888139187
作者: Lara Jaishree Netting
出版社: Hong Kong University Press
发行时间: 2013
装订: Hardcover
价格: USD 45.00
页数: 312

/ 10

0 个评分

评分人数不足
借阅或购买

John C. Ferguson and His Quest for Chinese Art and Culture

Lara Jaishree Netting   

简介

After serving as a missionary and then foreign advisor to Qing officials from 1887 to 1911, John Ferguson became a leading dealer of Chinese art, providing the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and other museums with their inaugural collections of paintings and bronzes. In multiple publications dating to the 1920s and 1930s, Ferguson made the controversial claim that China’s autochthonous culture was the basis of Chinese art. His two Chinese language reference works, still in use today, were produced with essential help from Chinese scholars. Emulating these “men of culture” with whom he lived and worked in Peking, Ferguson gathered paintings, bronzes, rubbings, and other artifacts. In 1934, he donated this group of over one thousand objects to Nanjing University, the school he had helped to found as a young missionary.
This work offers a significant contribution to the history of Chinese art collection. John Ferguson learned from and worked with Qing dynasty collectors and scholars, and then Republican-era dealers and archeologists, while simultaneously supplying the objects he had come to know as Chinese art to American museums and individuals. He is an ideal subject to help us see the interconnections between increased Western interest in Chinese art and archeology in the modern era, and cultural change taking place in China.

contents

Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I From Minister’s Son to Qing Official and Fledgling Sinologist (1866–1911)
Chapter 1 Achieving Prominence in China
Chapter 2 Engaging in Antiquarianism, Sinology, and Chinese Art
Part II A Qing Official Turned Art Dealer (1912–1918)
Chapter 3 Joining the Fray of the Peking Art Market
Chapter 4 “A Number of the Paintings Are Not of the High Order Desirable for This Museum”
Chapter 5 Contributing to “the Development of Art in America”
Coda
Part III Becoming a Collector of Chinese Art (ca. 1920–1935)
Chapter 6 Putting Down Roots in Republican-Era Peking
Chapter 7 Making a Private Collection
Chapter 8 A Donation and Exhibition of National Importance
Part IV A Lifelong Scholar
Chapter 9 Publishing a Purposeful Definition of “Chinese Art”
Chapter 10 Paintings That Did Not “Thrill the Soul” and Other Complications
Chapter 11 An “Indexer” and His Helpers
Coda
Chapter 12 “We Must Aim to Get Just as High as We Can”
Notes
Bibliography
Index

其它版本 (1)
短评
评论
笔记