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On display
Image of Gallery in South Kensington

Cup

1908 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This cup commemorates an autumn military parade near Lake Tai, Anhui province. The parade took place on 21 September 1908 (the jimao day in the eighth month of Guangxu 34th year). The Guangxu Emperor did not attend, but 'ordered Yin Chang and Duan Fang to officiate the event'. Having suffered a crushing defeat in the Sino-Japanese war in 1894-1895 China embarked on a series of reforms, and the strengthing of her military power ranked high on the agenda.

Whether the cup was made before or after the parade is a question worth reflecting upon. If the parade was foreseen as an important event and special porcelains were made to mark the occasion, it would seem logical that the Emperor would have been present. The fact that he sent two representatives implies that it was one of those routine military exercises. The event became historically significant because two months later the Guangxu Emperor died suddenly, at the age of 38. The cause of his death has since been the subject of great controversy. Before his untimely death the young Emperor had engaged in a long struggle for power with the Empress Dowager Cixi. Cixi died one day after Guangxu, but the ideologies they represented, namely conservatism versus reformism, remained incompatible. Commemorating the parade might have been a subtle message from the reformist camp that the battle still had to be won. A little more than three years later, in 1912, the Qing empire collapsed and China became a republic state.

Two other cups commemorating similar military parades in 1905 and 1911 respectively have been recorded, but it is this 1908 cup that was copied soon after the collapse of the Empire, probably not for its antiquity but for its historicity. There is a pair of cups with same inscription in a private collection. The shape and glaze, though superficially similar, show sufficient difference to suggest that they are later copies.



Object details

Category
Object type
Materials and techniques
Porcelain, painted in coloured enamels
Brief description
Cup in the form of a peony, with integrated straw in the shape of a stem, porcelain painted with enamels, China, 1908
Physical description
Cup made of porcelain in the form of a peony flower, painted with enamels in pink with a yellow calyx and a green stem dotted with black. The stem is hollow and serves as a channel for liquid to pass through from the hole in the calyx. On the back of the stem is inscribed in black enamel.
Dimensions
  • Height: 5cm
  • Length: 19.7cm
Style
Marks and inscriptions
(Written on the back of the stem in black enamel )
Translation
Great Qing Guangxu 34th year, cup to commemorate autumn military parade near Lake Tai, Anhui.
Gallery label
(2020)
Cup
China, Guangxu reign, dated 1908
The cup is in the form of a peony. It is inscribed, 'In the 34th year of the Qing Guangxu reign, cup to commemorate the autumn military parade near Lake Tai, Anhui'.
Museum no. FE.12-1972, E.V. Lee Gift
Credit line
E. V. Lee Gift
Summary
This cup commemorates an autumn military parade near Lake Tai, Anhui province. The parade took place on 21 September 1908 (the jimao day in the eighth month of Guangxu 34th year). The Guangxu Emperor did not attend, but 'ordered Yin Chang and Duan Fang to officiate the event'. Having suffered a crushing defeat in the Sino-Japanese war in 1894-1895 China embarked on a series of reforms, and the strengthing of her military power ranked high on the agenda.

Whether the cup was made before or after the parade is a question worth reflecting upon. If the parade was foreseen as an important event and special porcelains were made to mark the occasion, it would seem logical that the Emperor would have been present. The fact that he sent two representatives implies that it was one of those routine military exercises. The event became historically significant because two months later the Guangxu Emperor died suddenly, at the age of 38. The cause of his death has since been the subject of great controversy. Before his untimely death the young Emperor had engaged in a long struggle for power with the Empress Dowager Cixi. Cixi died one day after Guangxu, but the ideologies they represented, namely conservatism versus reformism, remained incompatible. Commemorating the parade might have been a subtle message from the reformist camp that the battle still had to be won. A little more than three years later, in 1912, the Qing empire collapsed and China became a republic state.

Two other cups commemorating similar military parades in 1905 and 1911 respectively have been recorded, but it is this 1908 cup that was copied soon after the collapse of the Empire, probably not for its antiquity but for its historicity. There is a pair of cups with same inscription in a private collection. The shape and glaze, though superficially similar, show sufficient difference to suggest that they are later copies.



Bibliographic reference
Wilson, Ming, Rare marks on Chinese ceramics, London : Published by the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, in association with the Victoria and Albert Museum, 1998 11
Collection
Accession number
FE.12-1972

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Record createdFebruary 8, 2000
Record URL
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