Recarving China's Past:
Art, Archaeology, and Architecture of the "Wu FamilyShrines"
Saturday and Sunday, April 30-May 1, 2005
Helm Auditorium, McCosh 50, Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey
Organized by
the Princeton University Art Museum in memory of Frederick W.Mote.
An international symposium exploring the architecture, art, and culture of
China's Han dynasty, 206 bce-220 ce, in conjunction with the exhibition of
the same title (March 5-June 26, 2005). Focusing on pictorial wall carvings
commonly recognized as constituting Han-dynasty funerary structures of the
Wu family cemetery, the symposium will raise significant questions about how
the Wu shrines have been identified and understood by scholars in the past
and how our understanding of Han art, architecture, history, and culture may
require reevaluation.
For more information about the symposium and exhibition, visit the project
webpage at http://www.princetonartmuseum.org/WuShrines/wushrines.htm
Saturday, April 30, 2005
Registration and coffee, 8:30-9:30 am
Morning Session 9:30-12:30 pm
Han Dynasty Funerary Practice and the "Wu Family Shrines"
Chair:
Wen C. Fong, Emeritus, Princeton University
Michael Loewe, Emeritus, Cambridge University
Han Funerary Practice
Jiang Yingju, Shandong Stone Inscriptions Art Museum, Ji'nan
The Iconographies of the Tree and Other Related Images in the 'Homage Scene'
Cary Y. Liu, Princeton University Art Museum
The Stones and Architecture of the 'Wu Family Shrines'-Recarving China's
Past
Afternoon Session 2:30-5:30
Han Funerary Art and Architecture in Shandong and Beyond
Chair:
Anthony Barbieri-Low, University of Pittsburgh
Lydia Thompson, Independent Scholar
Ritual, Art, and Agency: Consecrating the Burial Ground
Zheng Yan, Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing
On the Audiences of Eastern Han Funerary Art
Susan N. Erickson, University Of Michigan-Dearborn
Eastern Han Dynasty Que Pillars: The Wu Family Que and Related Pillars in
Shandong and Henan Provinces
Klaas Ruitenbeek, Royal Ontario Museum
The Northwestern Painted Carving Style and the Tomb of Zuo Biao (150 ce)
Reception 5:30-7:00
Princeton University Art Museum
Sunday, May 1, 2005
Registration and coffee, 8:30-9:30 am
Morning Session 9:30-12:30 pm
Architectural Functions and Carved Meanings
Chair:
Michael Nylan, University of California at Berkeley
Wu Hung, University of Chicago
What is a Shrine in the Han Dynasty?
Lu Huiwen, National Tsing-hua University, Taipei
Carvings of the Wu Family Shrines and the Canonization of Clerical Script
Miranda Brown, University of Michigan
Wu Stelae in Context-Can We Trust Them? How Should We Read Them and Why We Should Care
Hsing I-tien, Academia Sinica, Taipei
Composition, Types, and Significance of the Scene of Sino-Barbarian Battle
in the Pictorial Art of Han China
Afternoon Session 2:30-5:30
Reception of the "Wu Family Shrines" in Qing Dynasty
Chair:
Benjamin Elman, Princeton University
Lillian Lan-ying Tseng, Yale University
The Wu Family Shrines and Cultural Production in Qing China
Eileen Hsiang-ling Hsu, Princeton University Art Museum
Huang Yi's Fangbei Painting: A Legacy of Qing Antiquarianism
Bai Qianshen, Boston University
The Life and Art of Huang Yi
Wen C. Fong, Emeritus, Princeton University
Project and Symposium Critique
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