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Articles

THE ART OF CHINESE IMPERIAL GARDENS IN THE QING DYNASTY (1644-1911)

Article number
759_8
Pages
125 – 135
Language
English
Abstract
The Chinese Imperial Gardens, originated around 3,000 years ago, as informal palaces or part of formal palaces for worship, recreation, living, and administration based on hilly-aquatic landscapes and water culture.
The imperial gardens in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), located in Beijing and Chengde, created the North Style Gardens by means of incorporating the heritage of former gardens, addressing local natural and cultural contexts, and learning from the South Style Garden – the Scholar’s Gardens.
They are regarded as landmarks in the history of Chinese gardens.
They are magnificent, glorious, and mysterious. “Better than nature though from nature” was the main idea in creating these imperial gardens.
Their artistic characters explored: (1) beauty of harmony, (2) symbolic meanings, (3) poetic feeling and picturesque composition, (4) borrowed landscape, (5) framed landscape, (6) leaking landscape, (7) blocking landscape, and (8) facing landscape.

Publication
Authors
X. Liu
Keywords
Chinese culture, landscape architecture, picturesque composition
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