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Detail, Children Playing in a Garden
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November 18, 2009–May 23, 2010
Freer Gallery of Art |
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Children at play in fragrant gardens or at work in lush fields have been a recurring theme in Chinese art over the past two millennia. Objects and paintings dating from the first through the twentieth century, complemented by ceramics and ivory carvings, depict children playing in urban and rural settings. Relationships among family members, from infants in mothers' arms to siblings splashing in a tub of water, are explored through various media. Common childhood delights of catching butterflies and skipping rope are juxtaposed with lively images of boys herding oxen and romping in fields, all lovingly depicted in engaging scenes throughout the centuries.
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  More Chinese Art
• Black and White Chinese Ceramics
• Ancient Chinese
Pottery and Bronze
• Xu Bing: "Monkeys Grasping for the Moon"
Chinese Art in Our Collections
Center for the Art of East Asia
Resources on East Asian art at the University of Chicago
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