Asian Art Day Two - 21 May 2009

588

Eight Chinese kesi panels

£100 - £200

£280

Eight Chinese kesi panels, mounted on four boards, depicting figures and pagodas in watery landscapes, four on a blue ground and four a gold ground, 18th/19th century, 22cm. (4) Kesi, meaning 'cut silk', derives from the visual illusion of cut threads that is created by distinct unblended areas of colour. The earliest surviving examples of kesi date from the Tang dynasty, but it first became widely used during China's Southern Song period. The technique became particularly popular during the Ming period and thrived to the end of the Qing dynasty. The kesi technique was often used to copy famous paintings.

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