|
|
Dish
with Eight Buddhist Emblems
China,
Qing dynasty, Tongzhi period (1862-74)
porcelain with overglaze enamels, 18 7/8 inches (47.9 cm)
diameter
Gift
of May Wilfley in memory of her parents, A. R. Wilfley and
Addie M. Wilfley
1974.53
|
The
Tongzhi emperor was only nineteen when he died, and his mother,
the Empress Dowager Cixi (1835-1908), supervised state affairs
during his reign and that of the young cousin who succeeded him.
As patron of the Imperial Kiln, she influenced the ceramic style
of the period, and this large dish, colorfully decorated with
the eight Buddhist emblems, is typical of her taste. The rare
base mark of the dish indicates that it was made for the Chu Xiu
Gong, (Palace for Gathering Elegance), a palace within the Forbidden
City where she resided for many years and where, indeed, the Tongzhi
emperor was born.
To
China
|