Standing Elephant, Storage Box

2008.11.0011B

Thumbnail of Standing Elephant, Storage Box (2008.11.0011B)

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Basic Information

Artifact Identification Standing Elephant, Storage Box   (2008.11.0011B)
Classification/
Nomenclature
  1. Furnishings
  2. :
  3. Furniture
  4. :
  5. Storage & Display Furniture
Artist/Maker Unknown
Geographic Location
Period Late Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), Early Republic of China (1912-1949)
Date 18th - Early 20th century
Culture Chinese
Location Not on Exhibit

Physical Analysis

Dimension 1 (Width) 22 cm
Dimension 2 (Depth) 19.8 cm
Dimension 3 (Height) 14 cm
Weight 629 g
Measuring Remarks N/A
Materials Paper, Textile--Cotton, Plant--Fiber, Plant--Cotton, Textile--Synthetic, Plastic
Manufacturing Processes Cutting, Carved

Research Remarks

Description

This is the storage box for a Chinese bamboo carving that depicts an elephant with three figures situated on its back or tusk. One of the figures holds a bat, an auspicious animal which represents longevity and happiness. In Buddhism, elephants are believed to be the wisest of the animals and frequently appear in art and legend. For instance, P'u-hsien, the bodhisattva of Mount Omi, is frequently depicted riding an elephant.

Lacquerware was typically produced in government-sponsored workshops, though this was not always the case. In times of economic prosperity, the commercial workshops of southern China, particularly the southeastern provinces of the Song and Yuan periods (13th-14th century) and the late Ming era (1368-1644), were innovative in their approaches to creating lacquer items. Lacquer items from the Qing palace workshops were, at first, carved by craftsmen capable of overcoming the difficulties of lacquer carving due to their experience carving bamboo and ivory. However, the rapid political and economic decline of the Qing Dynasty following the reign of Qianlong (1735-1796) resulted in the closing down of many palace workshops, and the lacquer items made afterwards were fewer and had diminished in quality.

Published Description N/A
Bibliography

Dursum, Brian A. et al. China’s Last Empire: The Art and Culture of the Qing Dynasty, 1644-1911. Coral Gables: Lowe Art Museum, 2014.

Hutt, Julia. Understanding Far Eastern Art: A Complete Guide to the Arts of China, Japan and Korea - Ceramics, Sculpture, Painting, Prints, Lacquer, Textiles and Metalwork. New York: E.P. Dutton, 1987.

Spurlock Museum of World Cultures. Sculpted Stories: Selected Works from the Fred Freund Collection. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, n.d.

Watt, James C. Y., and Barbara Brennan Ford. East Asian Lacquer: The Florence and Herbert Irving Collection. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1991.

Artifact History

Credit Line/Dedication Fred A. Freund Collection
Reproduction N/A

Contact

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