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Five Thousand Years of Chinese Art


Article # : 15774 

Section : THE ARTS
Issue Date : 1 / 1989  2,094 Words
Author : Wu Tung and Shelley Drake
Wu Tung worked at the National Palace Museum, Taiwan, from 1962 to 1968. Currently, he is curator of the Department of Asiatic Art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Shelley Drake received a master's degree in East Asian Studies from Harvard University and is on the staff of the Department of Asiatic Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

       The man Americans blamed for having "lost" China to the communists in 1949, Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek, in fact "saved" China in one important respect: He preserved China's vast imperial art collection, which is now housed in the National Palace Museum in Taipei, Taiwan. During the winter of 1948, as president of the Republic of China, General Chiang arranged for 2,631 crates carrying the priceless treasures to be transported by battleship to Taiwan. The third and last shipment left Nanking in February 1949, just as the communist forces stormed the Yangtze River only miles from the city. One can only speculate what might have happened to the imperial collection had it remained on the mainland during the rest of the civil war, or throughout the Cultural Revolution twenty-five years later.
       
        The objects were transported to the city of Taichung, which has Taiwan's driest climate, and eventually were stored in a U-shaped mountain tunnel to shelter them against possible air raids. Security was extremely tight, and only a small portion of the collection was ever displayed in the simple exhibition hall nearby. In 1965, the collection was moved to its present site--a majestic, palace-style museum equipped with modern facilities.
       
        The imperial collection itself is the product of almost seven centuries of connoisseurship by emperors of the Sung (950-1279), Chin (1115-1234), Yuan (1271-1368), Ming (1368-1644), and Ch'ing (1644-1911) dynasties. Its beginnings date back to around A.D. 1127, the year after the Chin Tartars sacked the Northern Sung capital and looted the imperial holdings. Over the centuries, the collection has remained remarkably intact despite natural disasters and political upheavals, its losses balanced by new acquisitions.
       
        The person directly responsible for the present collection was the famous Emperor Ch'ien-lung, who reigned from 1736 to 1795. The emperor enriched the collection immensely during his reign, collecting the best contemporary works and, more importantly, acquiring ancient paintings and calligraphy from private owners. He also had the foresight to commission a catalog of the imperial collection in 1745, completed by 1845.
       
        Unfortunately, the result of the Emperor Ch'ien-lung's great connoisseurship was to some extent undone by the last emperor, Pu Yi, whose short reign ended with the establishment of the Republic of China in 1912. Pu Yi was permitted to continue living in the Forbidden City, during which time he sold or gave to relatives and foreigners many important works from the collection.
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