About gardens in China, Chinese gardens outside China, Chinese architecture and heritage.
Showing posts with label Chinese garden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chinese garden. Show all posts
Wednesday, 25 September 2019
Chinese plant circulation in the 18th century - the John Bradby Blake project & Environmental Humanities
Revisiting intellectual history of Chinese flora in Britain offers new perspectives on current issues such as environmental impact. I recently wrote a blog post on 18th century British trader John Bradby Blake's project of collecting Chinese plants and bring them back to Britain - and its little known impact on environment for the Bristol University's Environmental Humanities blog here.
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
Tuesday, 28 February 2017
Program for the 2017 Chinese garden history conference
| Yuyuan garden, Shanghai. Credits: Gu Liyuan |
The provisional programme of our 26-7th October 2017 Chinese garden history conference in Sheffield is now available!
This event is organised jointly by the Gardens Trust and the Landscape Department in the University of Sheffield. Sponsors to be announced shortly.
Tickets are on sale from March 1st, follow the link here.
PROGRAMME
New Research on the History of Chinese Gardens and
Landscapes
DAY
ONE: Thursday 26 October 2017
10.00-10.25 Registration
Chair: Dr Jan Woudstra, University of Sheffield
10.25 Welcome
10.30 Dr
Alison Hardie, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Leeds, UK
Chinese Garden and Landscape Studies in the
21st Century
11.00 Dr
Lei Gao, Norwegian
University of Life Sciences, As, Norway
The concept of Paradise in
Chinese Buddhism and its interpretation in designed landscape in Qianglong era
(1736-1795)
11.30 TEA/COFFEE
12.00 Xiaoyan
Hu, PhD candidate, Liverpool University, UK
The dialectic aesthetics of Xu (emptiness) and Shi
(fullness) in Chinese landscape art (landscape painting, landscape poetry,
gardening) from the Six Dynasties
12.30 Questions and
discussion
13.00 LUNCH
Chair: Josepha Richard, PhD Candidate, University of Sheffield
14.00 Dr Antonio José Mezcua López, Granada University, Spain
Hangzhou’s West Lake
Research Proposal: The Song Dynasty (960-1279)
14.30 Professor
Carol Brash, St John’s University, Collegeville, Minnesota, USA. Canonizing
the Garden of Solitary Delight (Dule Yuan)
15.00 TEA/COFFEE
15.30 Dr
Kate Bailey and Charlotte Brooks, Royal Horticultural Society, London, UK
The RHS Reeves collection of Chinese botanical
watercolours: a story of people and plants in China and Britain in the early
nineteenth century
16.00 Dr
Lianming Wang, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg.
Fountains
and Jesuit Water Landscapes in eighteenth-century Beijing
16.30 Questions and
discussion
17.00 CLOSE
Evening: Conference
Chinese dinner
DAY
TWO: Friday 27 October 2017
Chair: Dr Alison Hardie Honorary Research Fellow, University of Leeds
09.55 Welcome
10.00 Dr Stephen
Whiteman, University of Sydney, Australia.
Post-histories and past formations in a Qing garden
10.30 Josepha
Richard, PhD candidate, University of Sheffield, UK
East-West encounters in the Cantonese garden
11.00 COFFEE
11.30 Youcao
Ren, PhD candidate, University of Sheffield, UK
FengShui Landscapes in the late Qing Royal Garden
Design
12.00 Questions and
discussion
12.30 LUNCH
Chair: Dr Sally Jeffery, The Gardens Trust
13.30 Zhang
Yichi, PhD candidate, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia.
From Decoration to Necessity: the functions of
Public Parks in the British Concessions of China, 1842-1937
14.00 Yuanyuan
Liu, PhD candidate, University of Edinburgh, UK
The Modernisation of the Traditional Space during
the Chinese Park Movement: Case Study of Xuanwu Lake in Najing, 1928-1949
14.30 TEA/COFFEE
15.00 Professor
William Callahan, London School of Economics, London, UK.
Cultivating Power: Chinese gardens as sites of
diplomacy, war and peace
15.30 Questions and
discussion
16.00 CLOSE
Wednesday, 14 December 2016
Dates announced for the next conference on Chinese gardens & landscape! Oct 26/27th 2017
A conference co-organised by the Gardens Trust & the Department of Landscape (University of Sheffield)
Featuring engaging talks by specialists in several aspects of Chinese
gardens and landscapes (such as history, poetry, botany, social life,
layout).
The provisional program will be announced shortly!
Disclaimer: The previous announcement was off by one day, the conference is confirmed for 26-27th of October 2017.
Disclaimer: The previous announcement was off by one day, the conference is confirmed for 26-27th of October 2017.
Friday, 9 December 2016
Online review of 'The Classical Gardens of Shanghai' by Shelly Bryant
I am always interested in Chinese local garden history, which is why I reviewed the following book:
Bryant, Shelly. The Classical Gardens of Shanghai. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2016.
To read it please click here to go on newbooks.Asia.

Here is reproduced the short biography for Shelly Bryant available on the HKUPress website:
Shelly Bryant, poet, translator, teacher, researcher, and writer, splits her time between Singapore and Shanghai. She is the author of six poetry collections and two travel guides, and has translated more than ten books from Chinese to English.
Labels:
China,
Chinese garden,
garden,
History,
local history,
review,
Shanghai
Tuesday, 16 August 2016
CFPapers: Chinese garden and landscape history conference, Fall 2017, Garden History Society/University of Sheffield, UK
Following the success of the "New approaches in Chinese garden history" conference in June 2015, Jan Woudstra of the department of Landscape (University of Sheffield, UK) is helping the Garden History Society to organise another conference on the theme of Gardens and Landscape history of China, to be held at the University of Sheffield in the autumn of 2017.
This initial call for paper has for aim to hear about any ongoing research, and come up with a theme. Speakers would preferably be based in the UK/Europe (because of travel expenses).
Please forward us your abstract of about 300 words before the 25th of September 2016, to: j.richard@sheffield.ac.uk
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