Group portrait with Courtesans, Anonymous, Shanghai, c. 1885 Collection Ferry Bertholet Group portrait with Courtesans, Anonymous, Shanghai, c. 1885 Collection Ferry Bertholet - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: rijksmuseum

Was: Ausstellung

Wann: 05.06.2015 - 23.08.2015

Rare photos, photo albums and stereo photos from the collection of China expert Ferry Bertholet, enhanced with photographs from the Rijksmuseum’s collection, show 19th century unknown China at the time of the last emperors for the very first time. From 5 June to 23 August 2015 the Rijksmuseum is presenting Early Photography in Imperial China in it’s Photo Gallery. In the…
Rare photos, photo albums and stereo photos from the collection of China expert Ferry Bertholet, enhanced with photographs from the Rijksmuseum’s collection, show 19th century unknown China at the time of the last emperors for the very first time. From 5 June to 23 August 2015 the Rijksmuseum is presenting Early Photography in Imperial China in it’s Photo Gallery. In the 19th century Imperial China was almost entirely hidden away from the world until the last Emperor was deposed in 1912. Access was limited to port cities such as Shanghai, Hong Kong and Canton, which were forced to be open to the West after 1842 so that Westerners could trade unimpeded. The advent of photography coincided with a rapidly growing interest in the unknown China. The photographs in the exhibition take the visitor into this exciting unknown world of ports, quays and rickshaws, but also of narrow crowded streets bustling with the multitude of shops and ‘tea houses’ and their hostesses.

The display includes important photographs by such as Felice Beato (his famous photograph of the Second Opium War 1857-1860) and the famous China photographer John Thomson. They were among the first Europeans able to record images of a country that - even at that time - was still barely accessible to the rest of the world. Furthermore, this is also the first time that the work of Chinese photographers such as Afong, Lan Wah and Sze Yuen Ming has ever been shown in the Netherlands.Other highlights of the exhibition include a rare Chinese family portrait from 1860 from the Bertholet collection of American photographer Milton Miller, as well as the coloured photos of ‘types of people’ by Baron Raimund Ratenitz von Stillfried.

Besides the 35 photos in the exhibition, a huge travel camera from that time is also on display, illustrating how awkward it was to photograph such material. There are also stereo photos in 3D, including a special shot of the city of Peking in 1860, and photo albums and amateur photos of travellers to China are also on display.

A richly illustrated book was published recently: Ferry Bertholet & Lambert van der Aalsvoort, Among the Celestials. China in Early Photographs, Brussels 2014

Portrait of Monks, Baron von Stillfried, ca. 1875 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam Portrait of Monks, Baron von Stillfried, ca. 1875 Rijksmuseum Amsterdam - Mit freundlicher Genehmigung von: rijksmuseum / Rijksmuseum Amsterdam
Tags: 19. Jahrhundert, China, Kaiser, Schwarzweißfotografie‎, Stereofotografie

Daily from 9 am – 5 pm
Ticket salesTickets are available through: rijksmuseum.nl/late-rembrandtTickets are only valid for specified time slot. Early booking is highly recommended.
PriceUp to the age of 18 and Friends of the Rijksmuseum: free of chargeExhibition surcharge: €7.50Rijksmuseum admission: €17.50