detail of a Chinese handscroll painting
  • detail of a Chinese handscroll painting
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The Pauline and Joseph Degenfelder Distinguished Lecture in Chinese Art

“Heaven Is High and the Emperor Is Far Away”: Jiangnan in Ming-Dynasty China

Speaker: 

Craig Clunas, Professor Emeritus of the History of Art, University of Oxford

Tickets now on sale
Sunday, November 5, 2023, 2:00 p.m.
Gartner Auditorium

Free: ticket required

Although the Jiangnan region of China, meaning “south of the Yangtze,” was the site of the first Ming dynasty capital, the court relocated to the north of China half a century after the dynasty’s founding. From this time, emperors and their immediate families were largely absent from the culture of this prosperous and vibrant heartland. But many ties still linked the culture of Jiangnan’s “Southern Paradise” and that of the Ming court. This lecture focuses on what artworks, as well as literature, can tell us about the often-fraught relationship between Jiangnan, its people, and their distant rulers in the north.

Craig Clunas is the first scholar of Asian art to hold the chair of art history at the University of Oxford. Educated in Cambridge, Beijing, and London, he began his career as a curator at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. He is the author of numerous works on Chinese art and culture, particularly of the Ming period. He is a fellow of the British Academy and, in 2012, delivered the Mellon Lectures at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC.

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Education programs are supported in part by the Ohio Arts Council, which receives support from the State of Ohio and the National Endowment for the Arts.

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