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The Chinese watercolours on pith paper of plants aThe Gardener's Glimpse: Cantonese Watercolors for the Western Home
Object: Set of …
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The Chinese watercolours on pith paper of plants aThe Gardener's Glimpse: Cantonese Watercolors for the Western Home
Object: Set of Six Watercolour Paintings
Origin: Canton (Guangzhou), China, for the Export Market
Date: Circa 1860
Medium: Watercolor and Gouache on Pith Paper
Dimensions: 14 inches x 17 inches (Frame).
This charming set of six Chinese watercolours provides a delightful glimpse into the specialized subjects produced for the Western market during the 19th-century China Trade. Painted with a sense of naive charm, each work focuses on a different grouping of plants and exotic vegetables—a subject highly valued by Westerners eager to document the flora and agricultural bounty of the East.
The paintings are executed on pith paper, a material often mistakenly called 'rice paper.' This delicate medium is made from the spongy pith of the Aralia papyrifera plant. The preparation involved slicing the material thinly from a cylinder, yielding a fragile, translucent surface that was ideal for Chinese export art after 1800.
The Sparkle of Gouache on Pith
The unique appeal of these watercolors lies in the technical mastery of the medium. The Chinese artists utilized gouache (an opaque watercolor paint) which sits directly on the porous, velvet-like surface of the pith. This technique prevents the paint from sinking in, creating a bright, luminous, and sparkling effect with clean, vibrant colors and allowing for extremely fine detail. The resulting aesthetic was often perceived by Western buyers as exotic and indigenous.
Historical Context: Souvenirs of Status
Though highly fragile, these works were immensely popular status symbols. For travelers making the difficult and expensive journey to China, watercolors were a portable, high-quality souvenir when compared to large oil paintings or bulky ceramics. Produced primarily in Canton (Guangzhou), these works existed solely as a result of the cultural exchange between East and West, occupying an aesthetic space that was neither purely Chinese nor European. By depicting familiar subjects like flowers, costumes, or, in this case, vegetables, these naive yet accomplished paintings became important visual documentation for the West, recording the fascinating culture and commerce of 19th-century China.
References
Crossman, Carl L.: The China Trade: Export Painting, Furniture, Silver, and Other Objects (for comprehensive analysis of the genre).
Peabody Essex Museum Collection: Holdings of 19th-century China Trade watercolors, particularly those depicting botanical and agricultural subjects.
(Ref: ny7734-nirr)nd vegetables within a gilt frame are wonderfully naive and charming.
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- Dimensions
- 17ʺW × 0.5ʺD × 14ʺH
- Styles
- Chinese
- Traditional
- Frame Type
- Framed
- Art Subjects
- Botanic
- Still Life
- Period
- Mid 19th Century
- Country of Origin
- China
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- China
- Watercolor
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Cream
- Condition Notes
- no repairs no repairs less
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