Pictures of Cotton in Eighteenth-Century China

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A01=Roslyn Lee Hammers
agrarian
agricultural treatises China
agriculture
art history
artist
Author_Roslyn Lee Hammers
botanical
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Category=AFC
Category=AGA
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Category=PDX
Chinese
crop
cultivate
dynasty
economics
economy
emperor
eq_art-fashion-photography
eq_bestseller
eq_history
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Fang Guancheng
growing
harvest
imperial
imperial patronage art
Jiaqing
knowledge
labor
literature
manufacturing
material culture analysis
Ming
painting
plant
poetry
politics
Qianlong
Qing
Qing court cotton painting series
Qing dynasty agriculture
regime
science
silk
stele
technology
textile
textile production history
tilling
verse
visual culture studies
weaving

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032888019
  • Weight: 470g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Jul 2025
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Pictures of Cotton in Eighteenth-Century China narrates cotton’s journey from a little understand material to a cherished commodity ennobled by associations with the classical heritage of China. In the 12th century, cotton, an imported crop, was plucked from the fields and entered the margins of agricultural treatises. The material was eventually “acknowledged” as cotton, an object distinct from silk, worthy of representation. By the late 16th century, representations of the plant and of the labor used to process it were incorporated into agricultural publications. During the 18th century, cotton imagery and discussions were situated in imperial encyclopaedias, further consolidating its classical legacy. Governor-general Fang Guancheng (1696/8-1768) deemed cotton a worthy subject for ambitious painting. In 1765, he designed the Pictures of Cotton, a series of sixteen paintings complete with commentary that delineated the processes of growing cotton and manufacturing fabric. He presented the Pictures of Cotton to the Qianlong emperor (r. 1735-1796) who inscribed his imperial verse on each scene. Knowledge about the fiber became a means to collaborate at the highest level of the court and bureaucracy. Fang replicated the series, complete with imperial verses into carved stone to enable replication. The Jiaqing emperor (r.1796-1821) likewise published the series as woodblock prints. Upon domestication, cotton advanced political legitimacy, becoming a commodity that attained canonical status. Cotton was represented in a scopic regime formulated by the Qing imperium, and in the process, the Imperially Inscribed Pictures of Cotton became the authoritative vision of cotton.

This study is ideal for those studying Chinese art, Chinese history, Asian Studies, and history of science and technology.’

Roslyn Lee Hammers is Associate Professor at the University of Hong Kong.

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