Compiled from the Performing Arts programmes* and Visual Arts exhibition records from HKADC’s Arts Yearbooks and Annual Arts Survey projects dating from 2010.

Pictorial Silks: Chinese Textiles from the UMAG Collection

Visual Arts

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

Antiquities

Location

The University of Hong Kong, University Museum and Art Gallery

Start Date

2020/12/02

End Date

2021/07/25

Art Genres / Sub-categories

Antiquities

Location

The University of Hong Kong, University Museum and Art Gallery

Start Date

2020/12/02

End Date

2021/07/25

Pictorial Silks: Chinese Textiles from the UMAG Collection

Description

Description

Prized by Chinese and foreign merchants as an essential commodity along a vast trade network, silk served multiple roles throughout the ancient world: as fabric for garments, as a form of currency and method of tax payment, and as a medium and subject matter for professional artists and the literati class. Over the centuries, silk fabrics have remained synonymous with beauty and are entwined throughout the history of Chinese art and literature.

Beginning in the Song dynasty (960-1279) and flourishing into the Qing (1644-1911), craftsmen took up shuttles and needles as their brushes and silk threads as their pigments, creating exquisitely woven and embroidered pictorial and calligraphic works. In the hands of the weavers and embroiderers, weft-woven silk tapestry (kesi) and embroidery (cixiu) evolved into an art form—a fusion of painting, calligraphy and hand weaving or embroidering for aesthetic appreciation. When viewed together, the interdisciplinary nature of these vivid depictions of images and text occupy a unique and unbroken place within the history of Chinese visual culture.

Extending from the Qing dynasty to the mid-20th century, UMAG’s silk textile collection encompasses a diverse range of subjects and formats that include hanging scrolls, framed panels, banners and robes. Each artwork exemplifies the sophisticated craftsmanship of the artisans and the collective stories of the Qing dynasty’s textile industry.

Info

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

Local / Non-local Production

Local

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