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    Royal Style: The jewelry of the Qing court

    CGTN | Updated: 2018-08-22 11:34
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    Likewise, coral and turquoise were used to worship the deities of heaven, earth, sun and moon and on account of metaphoric associations between materials and colors.

    The jewelry of the Qing court reveals diverse styles through its adoption of certain elements of the Han-style costume on the one hand, and through using western materials like enamel and glass and employing the western techniques of lapidary and inlay on the other.

    The court favored the brilliant color of kingfisher feathers and used this to decorate the coronet. According to The Palace Museum, the coronet is an informal crown for imperial ladies including empresses and high-ranking concubines. It generally has a rattan frame or a black-silk-thread frame wound on a paperboard or iron wire in various designs, such as trellis patterns, cask patterns and endless knot patterns.

    Furthermore, gold, equal to the value of the currency, was always the most beloved material of the court people. The themes and designs of decorations often conveyed auspicious and celebratory meanings, such as wishes for good fortune, longevity, and safety.

    Four of "Twelve Beauties," Qing Dynasty. [Photo/The Palace Museum]

    The Power of Style

    Despite the traditional patriarchal society, women in the court of the Qing Dynasty still had an outstanding position.

    "Despite the stringent palace rules that kept them largely away from public view, these empresses led remarkably complex and inspiring lives," noted Daisy Yiyou Wang, PEM’s Robert N. Shapiro Curator of Chinese and East Asian Art.

    “This exhibition is thrilling in that it opens a silent yet colorful book about how these women helped shape the course of history," Wang added.

    More importantly, surveys show that, in the minds of many viewers, ancient Chinese female characters are often associated with foot-binding, which represents feudalistic superstition.

    However, the exhibition breaks the cognitive bias of audiences towards ancient Chinese women directly through the items on display.

    "It is necessary to study ancient women," said Jane Stuart, the co-curator of the exhibition, and the director of the Chinese Department of the Freer|Sackler Gallery of Art.

    "By paying attention to their material and spiritual world, we can break the limitations of understanding ancient Chinese women and fill in some gaps in the research," Stuart added.

    The "Empresses of China's Forbidden City: The art and life of the Empress of Qing Dynasty" exhibition will start from August 18.

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