calendar e-news tickets
       
         
 

Later Chinese Jades: Ming Dynasty to Early Twentieth Century

November 10, 2007–
August 17, 2008

Tateuchi Gallery

 

Jade water vessel with birdsView 73 superb examples of later Chinese jades, presented in a special installation to coincide with the publication of a major catalogue documenting the museum’s collection.

The core of the museum’s collection of Chinese jades was donated by Avery Brundage (1887–1975), an avid and discerning collector. Brundage formed most of his collection of approximately 1200 pieces between 1935 and 1960, a time when Western study of jade was in its infancy. Over the past decades considerable new information has become available in this field, both from archaeological discoveries and from careful research of period texts and of objects for which the date and history is well established. Much of this new research has been undertaken by experts in China.

In 1996 the Asian Art Museum began a systematic study of the jades in the Brundage collection. This included bringing a series of experts from China to survey the collection. The first was Yang Boda, ex–deputy director of the Palace Museum, Beijing, and a world-renowned specialist on Chinese jades who spent two months conferring with the museum’s curators. Following him was Mou Yongkang, Director of the Institute of Archaeology in Zhejiang province, and then Deng Shuping, the expert in Chinese jades at the Palace Museum in Taipei.

Armed with a new understanding of Chinese jades, the museum has published a major catalogue of its later objects in this medium.

 

 
  Jade catalog cover  

CATALOGUE

LATER CHINESE JADES: Ming Dynasty–Early Twentieth Century
By Terese Tse Bartholomew, Michael Knight, and He Li
With additional entries by Melissa Abbe and photography by Kazuhiro Tsuruta

$95.00

Nearly a decade in the making, this will become the definitive guide to Chinese jades from the Ming dynasty through the early twentieth century. As this book reveals—based on the most current scholarship—many jade objects previously thought to be of ancient manufacture were actually produced in these later periods. The 391 objects featured in the catalogue are divided thematically: animals and birds, objects of an archaic nature and copies of antiques, visual puns, religious objects, jewelry and other items of personal adornment, objects intended for the use of China’s educated elite, and utensils and vessels. A limited number of copies are available at the museum store.

 

 
  Jade vase  

Group Visits And JAde TOUR

Groups of 10 or more may purchase advance group admission tickets to the museum at discounted rates. For more group visit information, click here, call 415.581.3624, or email groupvisits@asianart.org.

You may also be interested in the following private tour of jade artworks in the museum's collection:

Jade: Beauty, Wealth, and Power
Trace jade’s complex development from powerful burial talismans to treasures prized by emperors, and learn about the dedication, patience, and years of training artisans must possess in order to produce objects of such beauty. Click here for details.

 

 
   

Artworks, from top: Water vessel with two parrots and prunus, approx. 1900. China. Qing dynasty (1644-1911). Nephrite. The Avery Brundage Collection, B60J455. Mythical bird presenting a vessel, China, approx. 1900–1949. The Avery Brundage Collection, B60J24+.

Organized by the Asian Art Museum. Display of the museum’s collection is made possible by Bank of America

 
         
 
calendar e-news tickets