1999.10 Court Lady


GENERAL DESCRIPTION
This court lady appropriates a form of mingqi, or "spirit objects,"  that were placed in tombs in China for the comfort and use of the deceased from the 3rd century BCE. This practice reached its peak in the Tang dynasty (618-917 CE), to which Anne Chu's figure refers. Instead of sancai, a varnish of three colors applied to ceramic sculpture, Chu has applied apparently arbitrary patches of color to blocks of wood glued together and cut in a rustic form. For the artist, this rough hewn figure, no longer protecting the deceased from evil or entertaining in the afterlife, is divested of any spiritual significance. Chu highlights critical questions of form and content while playing with the conventions and conditions of art.

Adapted from
Suzanne Weaver, Concentrations 32: Anne Chu and Bonnie Collura, October 15, 1998- January 17, 1999.

NOTES
source: File on TAZ.

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RELATED OBJECTS

PROVENANCE
Until 1999: Anne Chu (b. 1959)

1999: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of Deedie and Rusty Rose, purchased from AC Project Room, New York [1], [2]

[1] See copy of Dallas Museum of Art Gift Transmittal in Collections Records object file (1999.10).

[2] See the copy of the invoice dated November 8, 1998 in Collections Records object file (1999.10).

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apply to objects where number equals 1999.10

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General Description
This court lady appropriates a form of mingqi, or "spirit objects,"  that were placed in tombs in China for the comfort and use of the deceased from the 3rd century BCE. This practice reached its peak in the Tang dynasty (618-917 CE), to which Anne Chu's figure refers. Instead of sancai, a varnish of three colors applied to ceramic sculpture, Chu has applied apparently arbitrary patches of color to blocks of wood glued together and cut in a rustic form. For the artist, this rough hewn figure, no longer protecting the deceased from evil or entertaining in the afterlife, is divested of any spiritual significance. Chu highlights critical questions of form and content while playing with the conventions and conditions of art.

Adapted from
Suzanne Weaver, Concentrations 32: Anne Chu and Bonnie Collura, October 15, 1998- January 17, 1999.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources

Notes
source: File on TAZ.

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS

PROVENANCE
Until 1999: Anne Chu (b. 1959)

1999: Dallas Museum of Art, gift of Deedie and Rusty Rose, purchased from AC Project Room, New York [1], [2]

[1] See copy of Dallas Museum of Art Gift Transmittal in Collections Records object file (1999.10).

[2] See the copy of the invoice dated November 8, 1998 in Collections Records object file (1999.10).

AUDIO ASSETS

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
1999.10
tags
oil (organic material): AAT: 300014254
#draft
#completed
%copyedited_Gail
sculpture: AAT: 300047090
tombs: AAT: 300005926
female: AAT: 300189557
paint (coating): AAT: 300015029
standing: AAT: 300239500
%Archived
Contemporary (style of art): AAT: 300264737
@Bilal-Gore
*Contemporary Art
wood (plant material): AAT: 300011914
postmodern (international style and movement): AAT: 300022208
Mingqi: AAT: 300180706
courts (social groups): AAT: 300236519
Chu_Anne: ULAN: 500333056
Tang: AAT: 300018420
%exhibitions pending
casein: AAT: 300011799
Sancai: AAT: 300018511
source file
object_notes_2_c-0069.xml.nores