A Comparative Study of Eighteenth Century English and Ancient Chinese Garden Design


Book Description

This thesis offers a comparative study between eighteenth century English and ancient Chinese garden design, by examining the materials employed in landscape gardens, gardening techniques and principles, and aesthetic and philosophical beliefs operating in each country. It first examines the social-political background and geological conditions of each country. The landscapes of the countryside were models for gardens, in both England and China, and were created to serve a certain class of the society looking for freedom and solitary mediation. The following section comparatively analyzes the ways of thinking and aesthetics of each country at that time, which naturally affected people's tastes in art. These were the root of each national school of gardening, and give it a continuing character. The third section traces the evolution of the English and the Chinese landscape gardening movements. Typical garden designs of each school reveal the determinant role of the nation's cultural traditions and the impact from other countries, and illustrate how general principles and theories were applied in specific cases. These are then compared in the forth part, indicating how plans and chosen materials mirrored philosophical and aesthetic trends of each society. The thesis concludes that landscape gardens in these two nations reflect people's aesthetic standards, which were bound to their cultural traditions, their historical contexts, and the physical-geological conditions of the country. The affinities of the styles illustrate mutual cultural influences, and make it clear that people of common traits tend to embrace similar art forms; while the differences between them suggest that people with similar taste build their gardens according to their own natural environment and traditions and thus achieve different artistic effects.




Ideas of Chinese Gardens


Book Description

An annotated collection of essential texts written by European observers from the thirteenth to the nineteenth centuries, Ideas of Chinese Gardens chronicles the evolution of Western perceptions of gardens of China, from curiosity to admiration and ultimately to rejection, echoing the changes in European attitudes toward China.




A Jesuit Garden in Beijing and Early Modern Chinese Culture


Book Description

In this volume, Hui Zou analyzes historical, architectural, visual, literary, and philosophical perspectives on the Western-styled garden that formed part of the great Yuanming Yuan complex in Beijing, constructed during the Qing dynasty. Designed and built in the late eighteenth century by Italian and French Jesuits, the garden described in this book was a wonderland of multistoried buildings, fountains, labyrinths, and geometrical hills. It even included an open-air theater. Through detailed examination of historical literature and representations, Zou analyzes the ways in which the Jesuits accommodated their design within the Chinese cultural context. He shows how an especially important element of their approach was the application of a linear perspective--the "line-method"--to create the jing, the Chinese concept of the bounded bright view of a garden scene. Hui Zou's book demonstrates how Jesuit metaphysics fused with Chinese cosmology and broadens our understanding of cultural and religious encounters in early Chinese modernity. It presents an intriguing reflection on the interaction between Western metaphysics and the poetical tradition of Chinese culture. The volume will be of interest to scholars and students in a variety of fields, including literature, philosophy, architecture, landscape and urban studies, and East-West comparative cultural studies.







Master's Theses Directories


Book Description

"Education, arts and social sciences, natural and technical sciences in the United States and Canada".




Seeds of a Different Eden


Book Description

Seeds of a Different Eden is a pathbreaking multidisciplinary study of the influence of Chinese gardening concepts on the English landscaping revolution of the early eighteenth century and the resulting germination of new theories of beauty and art, which took form in the works of Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison, and Lord Shaftesbury and culminated in the aesthetic revolution of Immanuel Kant.




The Chinese Garden


Book Description




From Chinese Cosmology to English Romanticism


Book Description

A culturally sensitive and rewarding new understanding of the cross-cultural interaction between China and Europe In this important new work author Yu Liu argues that, confined by a narrow English and European conceptual framework, scholars have so far obscured the radical innovation and revolutionary implication of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and William Wordsworth's monistic philosophy. Liu's innovative intellectual history traces the organic westward movement of the Chinese concept of tianren heyi, or humanity's unity with heaven. This monistic idea enters the European imaginary through Jesuit missionary Matteo Ricci's understanding of Chinese culture, travels through Spinoza's identification of God with nature, becomes ingrained in eighteenth-century English thought via the langscaping theory and practice of William Kent and Horace Walpole, and emerges in the poetry and thought of Coleridge and Wordsworth. In addition to presenting a significantly different reading of the two English poets, Liu contributes to scholarship about English literary history, history of European philosophy and religion, English garden history, and cross-cultural interactions between China and Europe in the sixteenth, seventeenth, and eighteenth centuries.




The Chinese Taste in Eighteenth-Century England


Book Description

Eighteenth-century consumers in Britain, living in an increasingly globalized world, were infatuated with exotic Chinese and Chinese-styled goods, art and decorative objects. However, they were also often troubled by the alien aesthetic sensibility these goods embodied. This ambivalence figures centrally in the period's experience of China and of contact with foreign countries and cultures more generally. David Porter analyzes the processes by which Chinese aesthetic ideas were assimilated within English culture. Through case studies of individual figures, including William Hogarth and Horace Walpole, and broader reflections on cross-cultural interaction, Porter's readings develop new interpretations of eighteenth-century ideas of luxury, consumption, gender, taste and aesthetic nationalism. Illustrated with many examples of Chinese and Chinese-inspired objects and art, this is a major contribution to eighteenth-century cultural history and to the history of contact and exchange between China and the West.




Reading and Writing Landscape


Book Description

While this is a design thesis with concepts tested on the grounds of the State Botanical Garden of Georgia, it is also an investigation into the history of design theory. The underlying premise is that while the Botanical Garden (like gardens around the world) include a number of international gardens, those gardens too often only replicate forms void of any understanding of what drove a particular cultures' garden design moves in the first place. To test this idea a single site at the Botanical Garden is designed in two ways: first to represent theory and forms associated with traditional Chinese gardens and second to reflect ideas associated with the 18th century and early 19th century English Landscape School garden. For both of those garden types and traditions the thesis addresses site (the perspectives on place), sight (planning for view and vistas), and insight (the ideas and underlying philosophy associated with the design type). While these two design heritages have been after compared favorably as being about natural expression, the design solutions reflect both the commonalities and the differences between the two traditions.