About gardens in China, Chinese gardens outside China, Chinese architecture and heritage.
Wednesday, 25 April 2018
"This Little Paradise": Aviaries in 18-19th century Guangzhou gardens
I am happy to have been given 4 pages to discuss 18-19th century Guangzhou aviaries in the latest issue of Historic Gardens Review! For now it is only a preview on their website and the physical journal, but in the future it will be available as an online article.
I notably included rare pictorial evidence of aviaries in Guangzhou and Macao, as well as comparisons with British vision of Chinese aviaries and their feathery inhabitants. I found that it was a good way to capture the difference between chinoiserie and actual examples of Chinese garden buildings with contemporary evidence!
For a taste of what the article starts with, I invite you to read Patrick Baty's blog post on the aviary at Dropmore Park. The aviary as illustrated by Barbara Jones, was made with tiles from Canton and in a style reminescent of Chambers' chinoiserie, but surprisingly appears relatively close to what a late 18th- early 19th century aviary in Guangzhou or nearby Macao might have looked like.
Labels:
Aviary,
British gardens,
Canton,
China,
China Trade,
Chinese architecture,
Chinese garden,
Chinese gardens,
Chinese History,
Chinoiserie,
East-West interactions,
Gardening history,
Guangzhou
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