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traditional China, ancestor worship has long been a cornerstone
of the culture. Since the 16th century, painted scrolls of deceased
parents and forebears have served as a focus for private family
rituals from emperors to scholars to peasants. These rituals, which
the Chinese believe guide the deceased to the afterlife, continue
to this day.

Worshipping
the Ancestors: Chinese Commemorative Portraits, at the Arthur
M. Sackler Gallery, gives us a rare opportunity to observe this
fading form of memorial Chinese portraiture. With the advent of
photography, painting as a means for recording images of family
members has, for the most part, been replaced. It is remarkable
that the 38 large scroll portraits that make up the core of the
exhibition ever made it to the United States in the first place.
Historically, ancestor portraits were kept in the family and rarely
exhibited publicly. Possession of an ancestor portrait from someone
else's family was considered taboo, if not dangerous.
As the story
goes, an unusually large collection of 85 Chinese figure paintings
from the 15th to the mid-20th centuries found its way to the Sackler
Gallery in the early 1990s after an unknown 87-year-old horse breeder,
and art collector, named Richard G. Pritzlaff offered his collection
of portraits to the nation. Most of the works were first viewed
on family altars in imperial China. They later made it to the United
States in the 1930s and 1940s via an antique dealer, Wu Lai-hsi,
who was active in Peking and London at the time. Oddly enough, the
collection was even briefly owned by Ross Perot. After much trouble
locating the perfect home for his prize collection, Pritzlaff finally
invited the curators of the Sackler to his ranch in Sapello, New
Mexico, warning them to get there "very soon or your gallery
does not deserve to exhibit these works." The curators traveled
to Pritzlaff's ranch, where they were awed by his collection.

Most of the
works on display are portraits of the Manchu Qing Dynasty imperial
family and China's social elite. Furniture, textiles, and other
Chinese objects created between 1451 and 1943 are on hand, too.
Almost all of the frontally posed portraits were done by anonymous
artists; several represent the same individual. The portraits are
practically life-size and are ornately painted in vivid colors.
As the museum notes, some of the more informal portraits on view
illustrate the stylistic exchanges between the ritual and secular
portraits in the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties,
a period in which realistic portraits were valued in China.
Every portrait
has a story, and the museum goes to great length to tell each one.
Take for instance the "Portrait of Oboi" (d. 1669, pictured
at very top). Oboi was a powerful official who served the child
emperor of the Kangxi reign (1662-1722) for eight years. Oboi, a
domineering soul, provoked opposition to the court and was arrested
and imprisoned, where he died. In 1713, however, the same emperor
who had purged Oboi posthumously rehabilitated him to commemorate
his battlefield exploits during the Manchu conquest of China that
led to the founding of the Qing dynasty. Or, take the story behind
the pair of scrolls depicting Prince Hongming and his princess wife,
Lady Wanyan (pictured above), at the start of the exhibition. Like
Oboi, both are wearing elaborate costumes. Princess Wanyan wears
the jewelry appropriate for formal court occasions, though she is
dressed in a semiformal winter dress. Her coronet is decorated with
five gold-and-pearl ornaments. Similarly, the portrait of Prince
Hongming shows him dressed in semiformal winter court dress. There
is a dragon badge on his coat which signifies his court rank. His
costume is typical of those worn during the Qing dynasty.
Many critics
have said that after spending a while looking at face after face,
many of the portraits begin to look exactly the same. Perhaps this
explains why so many museums outside of China have been unenthusiastic
about exhibiting ancestor portraits. Regardless, it is worth a look,
as the Freer and Sackler galleries Director Milo Beach noted, "Worshipping
the Ancestors is the first exhibition in the West in more than
a half-century to focus on Chinese ancestor portraits, and is both
the largest and most rigorous in explaining the history and socio-religious
importance of this category of painting."
Art
Notes:
Worshipping
the Ancestors: Chinese Commemorative Portraits will remain
on view at the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery through September 9,
2001. The show will not travel.
All images
courtesy of the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery.
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