Exhibition Tour—Monstrous Beauty: A Feminist Revision of Chinoiserie

Join Iris Moon, Associate Curator in the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts along with artist Patty Chang, Professor of Art, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, to virtually explore Monstrous Beauty: A Feminist Revision of Chinoiserie, on view at The Met Fifth Avenue through August 17, 2025.

The exhibition radically reimagines the story of European porcelain through a feminist lens. When porcelain arrived in early modern Europe from China, it led to the rise of chinoiserie, a decorative style that encompassed Europe’s fantasies of the East and fixations on the exotic, along with new ideas about women, sexuality, and race. This exhibition explores how this fragile material shaped both European women’s identities and racial and cultural stereotypes around Asian women. Shattering the illusion of chinoiserie as a neutral, harmless fantasy, Monstrous Beauty adopts a critical glance at the historical style and its afterlives, recasting negative terms through a lens of female empowerment.

Video produced by The Metropolitan Museum of Art and SandenWolff, Inc.


Contributors

Managing Producer: Kate Farrell
Senior Producer: Melissa Bell
Production Coordinator: Lela Jenkins
Director/Camera: Jonathan Sanden
Interviewer/Story Editor: Rachel Wolff
Camera: Noah Therrien, Thomas Lange
Editor: Hannah Kaylor
Music: Courtesy of Jamendo and Premium Beat

Special thanks to:
Max Hollein, Marina Kellen French Director and CEO
Iris Moon, Associate Curator, Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
Patty Chang, Professor of Art, University of Southern California, Los Angeles
Joy Kim, Research Assistant, European Sculpture and Decorative Arts
Kate Dobie, Deputy Chief Development Officer
Malvika Dang, Production Assistant, Digital


Fan showing a dramatic scene of a volcanic eruption and lava flow.
How does an everyday object meant to provide relief from the heat represent centuries of travel and exquisite design?
Ashley E. Dunn and Jane R. Becker
December 11
Medieval-style hall with brick arches and statues, illuminated by lanterns arranged around a central stone structure.
Discover how American sculptor George Grey Barnard’s fascination with medieval European art inspired an enterprising collection and the eventual foundation of The Met Cloisters.
Shirin Fozi and Julia Perratore
November 13
More in:ConservationOn View