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plant-and-insect painting

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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2018) 68 (1): 47–66.
Published: 01 April 2018
... artists authenticity plant-and-insect painting In 2009 the government of South Korea issued a new 50,000-wŏn banknote adorned with an imaginary portrait of the painter Sin Saimdang 申師任堂 (1504–1551), the most famous female artist in all of Korean history ( Figure 1 ). The act was preceded...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2014) 64 (1): 43–57.
Published: 01 April 2014
... . 1. Cicada plaque, 4th–5th century . Gold with gilt edge. The insect’s body, viewed from above, is more copper backing plate and lapis lazuli, turquoise, coral, and glass inlay, 7 cm  6.5 cm. Metropolitan Museum of Art, compact than one observes in nature, but the details of Purchase, Bequest...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2011) 61 (1): 107–126.
Published: 01 April 2011
..., Plants and Insects in Chinese 19. For an illustration, see Eight Dynasties of Chinese Painting and Ceramics of the Yuan Dynasty (1279–1368) Painting, no. 84. (Seoul: Yekyong Publications, 1993), pp. 55–56. 20. Cited in Eight Dynasties of Chinese Painting...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2017) 67 (1): 83–109.
Published: 01 April 2017
... blossoms with brilliant pink washes and translucent green leaves are the sole focus of the painting, the blunt edges of their stems indicating that they were freshly snipped from the plant ( Figure 4 ). As Hui-shu Lee has observed in the work of Xie Yuan 謝元 (13th c.), academy painters of the Southern Song...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2007) 57 (1): 121–150.
Published: 01 April 2007
... his reputation in Kyoto and Tokyo ground at the edge of a gloom-enshrouded grove and during the early 1910s. He continued exploring images a body of rust-colored water. Leafy plants colored a of women throughout this decade, but sometime about sickly grayish yellow surround her, sprouting out...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2014) 64 (1): 3–32.
Published: 01 April 2014
.... Korea had a tradition of painting birds, insects, tiger skin was a jackpot in the Joseon period), Hankyoreh plants, etc. However, these paintings were far from realis- Newspaper, March 21, 2013. tic, employing limited modeling and shallow or indefinite 52. Templates...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2019) 69 (1): 73–101.
Published: 01 April 2019
... from a woman's tomb bears a pink peony-blossom pattern painted on a lacquered feather ground ( Figure 22 ). 61 Daylilies decorated the fans of brides and newlywed women because the plant's fecund reproduction served as a metaphor for fertility. 62 Figure 22. Fan excavated from tomb...
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Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2005) 55 (1): 39–52.
Published: 01 April 2005
... at the Mongol Court of China, (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art, 1993), pp. 21-51, and Roderick 126o-1368" (PhD diss., University of California, Berkeley, 1982); Whitfield, Fascination of Nature: Plants and Insects in Chinese Painting Marsha Weidner, "Aspects of Painting and Patronage at the Mongol...
Journal Article
Archives of Asian Art (2018) 68 (1): 1–32.
Published: 01 April 2018
... existence within the visual field as inexorably flat as an insect crushed between two panes of glass.” 99 While compelling, it is impossible to reconcile Krauss's evocative metaphor with the sculptural, pliable, and tactile pages of the Anthology —since a plane, no matter how shallow, need neither...
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