Not currently on display at the V&A

The Phoenix Flag (Red) Borne by the Guard of the Imperial Concubines of the Second Rank

Painting
1736-1795
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Page of the illustrated manuscript "The Illustrated Regulations for Ceremonial Paraphernalia of the Present Dynasty." It shows an illustration of the Phoenix Flag (red) borne by the Guard of the Imperial concubines of the second rank with a caption.


Object details

Object type
Titles
  • The Phoenix Flag (Red) Borne by the Guard of the Imperial Concubines of the Second Rank (generic title)
  • 清 冷鑒 皇朝禮器圖式:貴妃儀仗鳳旗圖 冊 (published title)
Materials and techniques
Ink and colour on silk
Brief description
Page of the illustrated manuscript "The Illustrated Regulations for Ceremonial Paraphernalia of the Present Dynasty." It shows an illustration of the Phoenix Flag (red) borne by the Guard of the Imperial concubines of the second rank with a caption.
Dimensions
  • Height: 42.3cm
  • Width: 41.3cm
Object history
Purchased from Walter H Harris and accessioned in 1896. This acquisition information reflects that found in the Asia Department registers, as part of a 2022 provenance research project. A letter from Mr Harris in the V&A archive files states that the leaves were 'taken from the Summer Palace in Pekin' a reference to the Yuanming yuan, the imperial summer retreat located north of Beijing, which was plundered and destroyed by British and French troops during the Second Opium War in 1860. There is no further information in the file as to how Mr Harris acquired the leaves.

The main body of the manuscript commission began in 1750 and it was completed in 1759. As many as twenty-seven court painters and calligraphers were working on the commission under five editors-in-chief, Yilu (1695-1767), Jiang Pu (178-1761), Wang Youdun (1692-1758), Guanbao (?-1776) and He Guozong (?-1766). After editing and further expansion in the ensuing years, the manuscript was printed by the Palace Publications Office in the Wuying Palace in 1766, and it was finally included as part of the Four Treasures imperial library project in 1773. For that purpose seven versions in total were produced and stored in libraries across the empire.

The museum's collection of the manuscript is incomplete. All its leaves, together with those in the British Library, in the National Museums of Scotland and in the National Museum of Ireland, may have been part of the version kept in the Wenyuan Pavilion library in the Yuanming Yuan (Summer Palace), Beijing.

These pages belong to the first of four groups of leaves from the manuscript acquired by the museum.
Subjects depicted
Collection
Accession number
896A-1896

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Record createdJune 25, 2009
Record URL
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