{"title":"The Flight of the Dragon","authors":"S. McCausland","doi":"10.1215/00666637-8124979","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"After his expulsion from the Forbidden City in 1924, China’s ‘last emperor’, Henry Puyi 溥儀 (1906-1967), settled in Tianjin where he later presented parting gifts to his former English tutor, Reginald F. Johnston 莊士敦 (1874-1938), including an album by the Nanjing painter Chen Shu 陳舒 (active c. 1649-c. 1687) from the ex-Qing (1644-1911) imperial collection and an inscribed folding fan. These are now reunited in the library collection of SOAS University of London, where Johnston taught Chinese after his return to Britain in 1931. Together with Puyi’s preface transcribed by courtier-calligrapher Zheng Xiaoxu 鄭孝胥 (1860-1938) for Johnston’s memoire, Twilight in the Forbidden City (1934), these artworks pave the way for an investigation of the practice of connoisseurship at Puyi’s court-in-exile in China’s era of modernism, including Puyi’s use of the imperial collection and his selection of these gifts even while he also shaping to become Japan’s puppet-emperor in Manchuria (r. 1934-45). The study roams beyond the well-known network of Puyi and his court advisors among the yilao 遺老 (Qing ‘old guard’) to uncover an unexpected modernist connection with the progressive young artist, publisher and taste-maker Zheng Wuchang 鄭午昌 (1894-1952), a leading actor in the reform of guohua 國畫 ink painting. The study rediscovers how Zheng Wuchang contributed the painting to an inscribed handscroll, Flight of the Dragon (or, A Storm and a Marvel 風益圖), McCausland, ‘The Flight of the Dragon’ 2 which commemorated, for the court inner circle, Puyi’s dramatic escape from the Forbidden City amid the realities of a modern, Republican world.","PeriodicalId":41400,"journal":{"name":"ARCHIVES OF ASIAN ART","volume":"70 1","pages":"51-83"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2020-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ARCHIVES OF ASIAN ART","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1215/00666637-8124979","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ART","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
After his expulsion from the Forbidden City in 1924, China’s ‘last emperor’, Henry Puyi 溥儀 (1906-1967), settled in Tianjin where he later presented parting gifts to his former English tutor, Reginald F. Johnston 莊士敦 (1874-1938), including an album by the Nanjing painter Chen Shu 陳舒 (active c. 1649-c. 1687) from the ex-Qing (1644-1911) imperial collection and an inscribed folding fan. These are now reunited in the library collection of SOAS University of London, where Johnston taught Chinese after his return to Britain in 1931. Together with Puyi’s preface transcribed by courtier-calligrapher Zheng Xiaoxu 鄭孝胥 (1860-1938) for Johnston’s memoire, Twilight in the Forbidden City (1934), these artworks pave the way for an investigation of the practice of connoisseurship at Puyi’s court-in-exile in China’s era of modernism, including Puyi’s use of the imperial collection and his selection of these gifts even while he also shaping to become Japan’s puppet-emperor in Manchuria (r. 1934-45). The study roams beyond the well-known network of Puyi and his court advisors among the yilao 遺老 (Qing ‘old guard’) to uncover an unexpected modernist connection with the progressive young artist, publisher and taste-maker Zheng Wuchang 鄭午昌 (1894-1952), a leading actor in the reform of guohua 國畫 ink painting. The study rediscovers how Zheng Wuchang contributed the painting to an inscribed handscroll, Flight of the Dragon (or, A Storm and a Marvel 風益圖), McCausland, ‘The Flight of the Dragon’ 2 which commemorated, for the court inner circle, Puyi’s dramatic escape from the Forbidden City amid the realities of a modern, Republican world.
期刊介绍:
Since its establishment in 1945, Archives of Asian Art has been devoted to publishing new scholarship on the art and architecture of South, Southeast, Central, and East Asia. Articles discuss premodern and contemporary visual arts, archaeology, architecture, and the history of collecting. To maintain a balanced representation of regions and types of art and to present a variety of scholarly perspectives, the editors encourage submissions in all areas of study related to Asian art and architecture. Every issue is fully illustrated (with color plates in the online version), and each fall issue includes an illustrated compendium of recent acquisitions of Asian art by leading museums and collections. Archives of Asian Art is a publication of Asia Society.