
Featuring Selections from the National Museum of History, Taiwan and the Arthur M. Sackler Collection, Smithsonian Institution
The San Antonio Museum of Art is pleased to announce the forthcoming exhibition 5,000 Years of Chinese Jade Featuring Selections from the National Museum of History, Taiwan and the Arthur M. Sackler Collection, Smithsonian Institution. This major international exhibition organized by SAMA opens in the Museum’s Cowden Gallery on October 1, 2011. The exhibition is held in conjunction with the City of San Antonio’s yearlong celebration of Taiwan.
With its broad historical approach, the exhibition provides an opportunity to experience the great breadth of Chinese history through outstanding works of art. The exhibition and accompanying catalog for 5,000 Years of Chinese Jade is arranged chronologically. Principal types represented in the jade exhibition include ritual objects, weapons, scholar’s objects, adornments and jewelry, and vessels. The jades vary greatly in color, size, date, and function. An Education Gallery located in the exhibition allows visitors to further explore the subject through videos, books, and computer resources.
The primary lender to the exhibition is the National Museum of History in Taipei, Taiwan. The National Museum of History has generously contributed forty-five outstanding jade works of art to the exhibition. Of particular interest are five jades from the Spring and Autumn period (770 - 476 BC) classified as Important National Treasures of Taiwan. Most of the jades from Taiwan, including the National Treasures, will be on view in America for the first time.
Another prestigious lender to 5,000 Years of Chinese Jade is the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution. Twenty-four jades from the celebrated Sackler Collection complement the jade objects from Taiwan. Highlights from the Sackler Gallery include the famous Han dynasty Bear (220 BC – AD 221) and Song dynasty Hound (960-1279). Two additional lenders also provide exquisite jades: A number of large 18th century jades, including a lovely Elephant Vase from the Qianlong period (1736-1795), are on loan from the Springfield Museums in Springfield, Massachusetts. An anonymous private American collector contributes a dozen superb jades, several which were carved in Imperial workshops, including an elegant bird carving with Emperor Qianlong’s seal mark. The San Antonio Museum of Art contributes two jades to the exhibition, both acquired within the last two years.
The Museum is grateful for generous financial support of this major exhibition from the Helen and Everett H. Jones Exhibition Endowment, Lenora and Walter F. Brown, the Mays Family Foundation, the City of San Antonio Office of Cultural Affairs, the Texas Commission on the Arts, Rose Marie and John L. Hendry III, the Daniel J. Sullivan Family Charitable Foundation, the Council for Cultural Affairs, Taiwan and the Taipei Cultural Center of TECO in New York. This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.
Upcoming Events
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October 1 Chinese Banquet Celebrating 5,000 Years of Chinese Jade...Read More |
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October 2 Lecture: The Louis A. and Frances B. Wagner Lecture Series: The Gentleman Is Never Without His Jade, Dr. Jenny F. So...Read More |
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October 4 Lecture: Dragon Motif and Arc-shaped Huang Pendant Sets in the Age of Confucius, Dr. Chan Lai-Pik...Read More |
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October 9 Lecture: Jade and Chinese Cosmology, Dr. Stephen Little...Read More |
The November Zhang Yimou Film Series |
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November 8 Series I: Hero (PG-13, 2002, 99 minutes)...Read More |
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November 15 Series II: House of Flying Daggers (PG-13, 2005, 119 minutes)...Read More |
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November 22 Series III: Curse of the Golden Flower (R, 2007, 114 minutes) ...Read More |
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December 4 First Sundays for Families: Jade...Read More |
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January 24 Film: Last Train Home (NR, 2009, 87 minutes)...Read More |
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January 27 SAMA Celebrates the Year of the Dragon...Read More |
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January 31 Lecture: Dragons in Chinese Jade, John Johnston, Curator of Asian Art...Read More |






























