Bronzewares still shine bright

Collaboration between two famed museums brings ancient vessels and their symbolism into the modern age, Zhang Kun reports in Shanghai.

By Zhang Kun | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2025-12-02 07:23
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Censer with a Lion-shaped Lid, Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), from Shanghai Museum. GAO ERQIANG/CHINA DAILY

The final part explains how scholars and aesthetes transformed archaistic bronzes from revered vessels of the state into elegant studio furnishings for the leisurely appreciation of antiquity.

During the exhibition in New York, over 300,000 visitors went to The Met to see the show, Hollein says. "It was a revelation for audiences in regard to the deep understanding of more recent Chinese bronzes, but also a celebration of the great collaboration between the Shanghai Museum and The Metropolitan Museum."

Chu Xiaobo, director of the Shanghai Museum, says the exhibition marks another milestone in the collaboration between the two institutions that dates back to 1980, when the Shanghai Museum participated in an exhibition of Chinese bronze at The Met.

The Shanghai Museum and The Met are planning further collaborations, Hollein says. "We already have one (project) framed up, and we will announce something very soon, with the Shanghai Museum."

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