The present volume is based on two scholarly gatherings organized by the Center of the Art of East Asia, Dept. of Art History, at the University of Chicago to explore this theme in great detail. The conference papers, and now these resulting essays, offer new insights into this phenomenon, its philosophies, technologies, and the individual involved in represening the past in Chinese art and visual culture.
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Contents:
Introduction: Patterns of Returning to the Ancients in Chinese Art and Visual Culture by Wu Hung
Reviving Ancient Ornament and the Presence of the Past: Examples from Shang and Zhou Bronze Vessels by Jessica Rawson
Antiquarianism in Eastern Zhou Bronzes and Its Significance by Lothar von Falkenhausen
Imitation and Reference in China's Pictorial Tradition by Martin J. Powers
Antiquartianism and Re-envisioning Empire in the Late Northern Wei by Katherine R. Tsiang
Reinventing the Past, Inventing a Dynasty: Inspiration of Monuments of the Past and Tang Dynastic Topography by Tonia Eckfeld
Replicating Zhou Bells at the Northern Song Court by Patricia Ebrey
Cataloguing Antiquity: A Comparative Study of the Kaogu tu and Bogu tu by Yun-Chiahn C. Sena
Antiquarian Politics and the Politics of Antiquartianism in Ming Regional Courts by Craig Clunas
Between Printing and Rubbing: Chu Jun's Illustrated Catalogues of Ancient Monuments in Eighteenth-Century China by Lillian Lan-Ying Tseng
Composite Rubbings in Ninettenth-Century China: The Case of Wu acheng (1835-1902) and His Friends by Qianshen Bai
The Qing Imperial Collection, Circa 1905-25: National Humiliation, Heritage Preservation and Exhibition Culture by Cheng-hua Wang
Antiquartianism or Primitivism? The Edge of History in the Modern Chinese Imagination by Sarah E. Fraser
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