Nanshan Jixue (Southern Mountains Piled with Snow)
RIPA Father Matteo (1714.)
£8000.00
Please contact us in advance if you would like to view this book at our Curzon Street shop.
Copperplate print on Chinese paper, measuring ca. 32x29cm. Traces of central fold and minor creasing. Otherwise in fine condition. [Peking, Imperial Workshop],
The emperor decided to celebrate the occasion with a palace edition that illustrates each scene with a large woodcut accompanied by poetic descriptions from his brush. It was published under the title Yuzhi Bishu Shanzhuang sanshiliu jing shi (1712, with woodcuts by Shen Yu). He then asked Matteo Ripa to copy each of the woodcut scenes using copper plates. Ripa managed to complete the project just in time for the Emperor’s 60th birthday in 1713 and presented him with a set. It was the first time this technique had been used in China and it found the Emperor’s admiration. In the late 18th century, his grandson, the Qianlong Emperor, used the technique to produce a series of engravings celebrating victorious battle campaigns.
The present print shows the Nanshan Jixue (Southern Mountains Piled with Snow) square pavilion, located in the top of the northern hills in the garden. It is unusual in that the name does not refers to the pavilion itself, but to the view one has from there of the mountains south of the Bishu Shanzhuang which remain snow-covered well into spring. It is the 13th in the series of thirty-six scenes named by the Kangxi Emperor. (See: Strassberg/Whiteman: Thirty-six Views. The Kangxi Emperor’s Mountain Estate in Poetry and Prints. Washington, Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection, 2016, p. 174)
Sets or individual prints of the Ripa engravings are exceedingly rare. They were only distributed amongst the close circle of the Emperor’s friends and family. We are only aware of one set having been offered at auction since 1945.
Stock Code: 244865