Splendors of the National Palace Museum

File type
application/pdf
Date
2014
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Palace Museum
Citation
Rights
Licensed rights
ผลงานนี้เผยแพร่ภายใต้ลิขสิทธิ์ของของสถาบันพิพิธภัณฑ์การเรียนรู้แห่งชาติ
Other title(s)
Authors
Editor(s)
Other contributor(s)
Interviewee
Interviewer
Abstract
The National Palace Museum's rich treasures originate from the imperial Qing court a long tradition of dynastic China's royal collections. Facing the threat of war after the 918 Incident (1931), a best selection was ready to leave the Forbidden City (1933) and to evacuate south. The first stop was at Shanghai (1934), and then on to the Republic's capital Nanjing, where a Preparatory Office was set up in 1936 for the proposed National Central Museum. From there, 3,824 crates again went to Taiwan in 1948 and stayed in Baigou, Taizhong County until in 1965 a museum complex was completed at Wishuangxi, Taipei.
Table of contents
CONTENTS DIRECTOR'S PREFACE THE HERITAGE: FROM INHERITANCE TO INNOVATION A Brief History of the National Palace Museum ANTIQUITIES : Heavenly Treasures JADE : Finest Quintessence Nurtured by Mountains and Rivers BRONZE : Grandest Treasure of the State CERAMICS : Graceful Splendor That Dazzles CURIOS : Ingenuity Rivalling Celestial Feats CALLIGRAPHY and PAINTING : Sublime Art in Brush and Ink RARE BOOKS and HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS : Sanctuaries of Knowledge SAFEGUARDING AND PROMOTING THE HERITAGE : Preservation, Service, Exchange, and Creativity CHRONOLOGY OF EVENTS TIMELINE of the ARTIFACTS FORMER and PRESENT LEADERS CHRONOLOGY of DYNASTIC CHINA
Description
Sponsorship
Youtube
Collections