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1,765 results for song dynasty

Image for Northern Song Dynasty (960–1127)
Essay

Northern Song Dynasty (960–1127)

October 1, 2001

By Department of Asian Art

The early Northern Song dynasty witnessed the flowering of one of the supreme artistic expressions of Chinese civilization: monumental landscape painting.
Image for Southern Song Dynasty (1127–1279)
Essay

Southern Song Dynasty (1127–1279)

October 1, 2001

By Department of Asian Art

The decorative arts reached the height of elegance and technical perfection during the Southern Song.
Image for Art Song in Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's France
editorial

Art Song in Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux's France

April 18, 2014

By Michael Cirigliano II

Website Editor Michael Cirigliano II traces the advent of nineteenth-century French art song ahead of the upcoming Met Museum Presents performance, Sculpting Sound: The Music of Carpeaux's Circle.
Image for The Antonine Dynasty (138–193)
Essay

The Antonine Dynasty (138–193)

October 1, 2000

By Department of Greek and Roman Art

The Antonine Dynasty reflects the connections between wealthy provincial and Italian families.
Image for Han Dynasty (206 B.C.–220 A.D.)
Essay

Han Dynasty (206 B.C.–220 A.D.)

October 1, 2000

By Department of Asian Art

China was reunited under the rule of the Han dynasty.
Image for Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368)
Essay

Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368)

October 1, 2001

By Department of Asian Art

In the hands of highly educated scholar-artists, brushwork became calligraphic and assumed an autonomy that transcended its function as a means of creating representational forms.
Image for Ming Dynasty (1368–1644)
Essay

Ming Dynasty (1368–1644)

October 1, 2002

By Department of Asian Art

Valuing the presence of personality in a work over mere technical skill, the Ming scholar-painter aimed for mastery of performance rather than laborious craftsmanship.
Image for The Qing Dynasty (1644–1911): Loyalists and Individualists
Essay

The Qing Dynasty (1644–1911): Loyalists and Individualists

October 1, 2003

By Maxwell K. Hearn

Many Ming officials and loyal subjects withdrew from public service after the fall of the Ming dynasty and lived in enforced retirement, pursuing personal and artistic self-cultivation.
Image for Tang Dynasty (618–907)
Essay

Tang Dynasty (618–907)

October 1, 2001

By Department of Asian Art

Marked by strong and benevolent rule, successful diplomatic relationships, economic expansion, and a cultural efflorescence of cosmopolitan style, Tang China emerged as one of the greatest empires in the medieval world.
Image for The Qing Dynasty (1644–1911): The Traditionalists
Essay

The Qing Dynasty (1644–1911): The Traditionalists

October 1, 2003

By Maxwell K. Hearn

China’s scholarly elite was deeply influenced by the theories and art of the late Ming artist, collector, and theorist Dong Qichang.
Image for Stele for the Confucius Temple

Date: Stele: Song dynasty (960–1279), 960–68; rubbing: 20th century
Accession Number: 1977.375.12

Image for Song dynasty Poems

Zhou Zhaoxiang (Chinese, 1880–1954)

Date: 20th century
Accession Number: 1995.289.8

Image for A Temple Stele for Zhou the Daoist of the Song Dynasty

Wu Dacheng (Chinese, 1835–1902)

Date: dated 1895
Accession Number: SL.30.2014.4.1a–y

Image for Shallow dish, Jun ware

Chinese , Northern Song Dynasty

Date: 11th–12th century
Accession Number: 1975.1.1650

The most important and comprehensive exhibition of its kind ever assembled in the West, The Embodied Image: Chinese Calligraphy from the John B. Elliott Collection</I> — opening September 15 — will bring together some 120 works of art from the two principal collections of Chinese calligraphy that were formed in the United States. More than 55 masterworks from the John B. Elliott Collection of The Art Museum, Princeton University — perhaps the finest such collection outside Asia — will be integrated with a similar number of masterpieces from The Metropolitan Museum of Art, most notably from the John M. Crawford Jr. Collection, and loans from six private collections. Spanning the period from the fourth century to the modern era, the exhibition will explore the stylistic range and individuality of many of the leading artists of the last 1,000 years.
Image for Monk Sengqie

Date: late 11th–12th century
Accession Number: 43.114

Image for Vase
Art

Vase

Date: 12th–13th century
Accession Number: 26.292.81

Image for Sitting boy

Date: 12th century
Accession Number: 2024.276

Image for Dish with Scalloped Rim

Date: 11th century
Accession Number: 1991.253.16

Image for Dish with Flowering Plum and Birds

Date: 14th century
Accession Number: 2011.120.2