Sponsored by Bei Shan Tang Foundation
Date: 22–23 November 2024
Venue: Connie Fan Multi-Media Conference Room, 4/F, Cheng Yick-chi Building, City University of Hong Kong
During the second half of the seventeenth century, the production of Coromandel screens, also known as kuancai (“carved polychrome”), flourished along China’s southeast coast. These screens became immensely popular both domestically and in European markets, establishing connections between regional artisans, merchants, and prominent European figures, including royalty and nobility. In the last two decades of this century, Coromandel screens emerged as one of China’s most frequently exported commodities, rivaling porcelain and challenging Japanese lacquerware exports. Their significance extends far beyond the common perception of them as merely mass-produced craftwork of inferior quality.
With the generous support of the Bei Shan Tang Foundation, the Department of Chinese and History at City University of Hong Kong will host a two-part academic event titled “Unfolding the Coromandel Screen” to celebrate the department’s tenth anniversary. The conference, organized by Lianming Wang (City University of Hong Kong) in collaboration with Mei Mei Rado (Bard Graduate Center, New York), will take place on-site at City University of Hong Kong and via Zoom from 22 to 23 November 2024. It will bring together an international group of art historians, museum curators, conservators, collectors, and global historians. Participants will explore various aspects of the Coromandel screen and its intricate histories, including its interrelations with paintings, prints, decorative arts, palatial and interior designs, global maritime trade, and the fashion industry. Following the conference, the speakers will join a two-day traveling seminar from 24 to 25 November, visiting lacquer and conservation workshops as well as museum collections in Hong Kong and Guangzhou.
Keynotes by
Transcultural Treasures: Kuancai (aka Coromandel) Screens in China and Abroad
Jan Stuart, National Museum of Asian Art, Washington D.C.
The Taste for Coromandel Lacquer in France in the 17th and 18th Centuries: Trade, Reception and Customs
Stéphane Castelluccio, CNRS, Centre André Chastel, Paris
Conference Program
Please click here to download the conference program.
Registration
For onsite/online participation, please register via the conference website:
https://www.cah.cityu.edu.hk/events/Coromandel-Screen-Conference
Advisory Board: May Bo Ching (City University of Hong Kong), Burglind Jungmann (UCLA), Mei Mei Rado (Bard Graduate Center, New York), Anton Schweizer (Kyushu University), Ching-Fei Shih (National Taiwan University), Lianming Wang (City University of Hong Kong, Xiaodong Xu (†) (Art Museum of The Chinese University of Hong Kong)
Supporting Institutions: Art Museum of The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong Maritime Museum, Lee Shau Kee Library of The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Guangdong Provincial Museum, Guangzhou Museum, Chen Clan Ancestral Hall – Guangdong Folk Arts Museum
Inquiries
Department of Chinese and History, City University of Hong Kong
Tel: 852-3442 2054
Email: lianming.wang@cityu.edu.hk