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'Royal Taste: The Art of Princely Courts in Fifteenth-Century China' at the Ringling Museum of Art, Florida

Royal Taste: The Art of Princely Courts in Fifteenth-Century China, featuring many works of art never seen outside of China, is on view Oct. 9, 2015-Jan. 10, 2016 at The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, Florida.

'Royal Taste: The Art of Princely Courts in Fifteenth-Century China' at the Ringling Museum of Art, Florida
Gold Hairpins in Phoenix Shape, Mid-16th Century, Ming Dynasty. On loan from the Hubei Provincial Museum, P.R. China [Credit: Ringling Museum]
Royal Taste brings together works from the Hubei Provincial Museum and its affiliated institutions, along with The Ringling’s own Asian collection, to offer a rare glimpse into the lives of princely courts in early- to mid-Ming Dynasty China (1368-1644). The exhibition is the first in a series of exhibitions devoted to Asian art, and serves as a precursor to the opening of The Ringling’s Center for Asian Art in the Dr. Helga Wall-Apelt Gallery of Asian Art, scheduled for opening in 2016. The loans from the Hubei Provincial Museum, one of the leading museums in China, mark the beginning of significant collaboration between The Ringling and major museums in Asia. All the loans are on public view in the U.S. for the first time, and more than twenty percent are regarded as national treasures.

“As we prepare to open our new center for Asian art, we’re thrilled to mount an exhibition of such rarity and beauty in partnership with the Hubei Provincial Museum,” said Steven High, Executive Director at The Ringling. “Royal Taste furthers The Ringling’s commitment to celebrate the vast scope of Asian art, and provides our audiences a first look at the type of world-class exhibitions and international programming that we plan to organize through the center for Asian art.”

The exhibition features more than 140 works of pictorial, sculptural and decorative arts from recently-found royal tombs and the sacred Daoist Mount Wudang, a UNESCO world cultural heritage site. These works reveal some lesser-known aspects of palatial lives, religious patronage and afterlife beliefs of Ming princes, whose world has long been a mystery. Highlights include 40 works from the tomb of Prince Zhuang of Liang (d. 1441) in Zhongxiang city, which is one of the most significant discoveries of Ming archaeology in the past 50 years; a variety of personal jewelry made of gold and gems from the royal tombs of the Jing Kingdom in Qichun County; a dozen imperially-commissioned Daoist statues from Mount Wudang, the birthplace of tai chi practice; and pictorial and decorative works from the permanent collection of the Hubei Provincial Museum, including masterpieces by Ming painters Dai Jin (1388–1462), Lü Ji (1477–unknown) and Wu Wei (1459–1508).

The exhibition is organized by The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in association with the Hubei Provincial Museum, China and curated by Dr. Fan Jeremy Zhang, the Dr. Helga Wall-Apelt Associate Curator of Asian Art at The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art.

“There’s a remarkable wealth of the material world of Ming princes yet to be given enough scholarly attention,” said Dr. Fan Zhang. “The royal patronage from the regional courts truly had a significant impact on the art-making and consumption of late imperial China. One of the largest exhibitions of courtly art from this period ever presented in the U.S., Royal Taste offers a fantastic showcase of the courtly art and life of provincial Ming China. I hope that The Ringling’s visitors will enjoy the opportunity to explore these tremendous works and learn about this exciting time in world history.”

A fully-illustrated catalogue published by Scala Arts & Heritage Publishers accompanies the exhibition.

Click here to learn more about this exhibtion

Source: The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art [November 04, 2015]