|
|
Objects
and Symbolism | Home | Museum Home Page
The worlds finest museum collection of Chinese porcelain figurines
is featured in the newly installed Pamela Cunningham Copeland Gallery
at the Peabody Essex Museum. Mrs. Copeland began collecting these
rare figures in 1937. During a sixty year period, she amassed more
than 200 exceptional examples of one of Chinas most captivating
decorative arts. Mrs. Copeland made plans to bequeath her collection
to the museum after developing a lasting friendship with Dr. H. A.
Crosby Forbes, curator emeritus of the department of Asian export
art.
Beguiling and amusing, as Mrs. Copeland said, these colorful
animal, bird, and human figures are historically significant as tangible
representations of the interplay between Eastern and Western cultures.
Their designs reflect cross-cultural influences, and illuminate the
Chinese perception of Western tastes. Produced mainly for export,
these fragile figures were primarily made to order and destined for
wealthy private collectors.
The Copeland Collection is known internationally for the superb quality
and impressive variety of its many rare forms. Because of her extensive
travels and research, Mrs. Copeland was respe
"known internationally for the superb quality and impressive
variety of its many rare forms. "
|
cted as one of the foremost experts on the subject.Each piece she
collected expresses the form, proportion, detailed decoration, and
distinctive modeling that characterize the work of a master potter.
Spanning three centuries from the reign of Kangxi (16621722)
to Daoguang (182150), the collection includes engaging figures
of dogs, elephants, deer, and birds, as well as human forms representing
both Chinese and European figures and scenes. There are carp, water
buffalo, and duck water-droppers; a variety of candleholders; and
containers shaped as a toad, a hawk, and a western-style shoe. Soup
tureens represent ducks, a quail, a rooster, elephants, and a dramatic
boars head with protruding tongue. Many of the pieces are one-of-a-kind,
or one of very few extant.
Mrs. Copeland realized that an assemblage of this nature would never
again be possible and that keeping the collection intact at a major
institution was the best way to ensure its acessibility to the public.
She deemed the Peabody Essex Museum, the only museum with a department
devoted solely to Asian export art, as the perfect repository for
her exceptional collection. Mrs. Copelands generosity also made
possible the publication of the first comprehensive work on a collection
of Asian ceramic figures.
Written by curator of Asian export art William Sargent, The Copeland
Collection catalog is for sale in the museum shop.
Objects
and Symbolism | Home
|
|