A fine album of Chinese watercolours depicting the production of tea and the tea trade
Chinese Watercolours
China
[c.1840]
Oblong folio, original decorated silk covered boards with ties. A beautiful set of twelve watercolours, brightly hued, each lined with blue silk ribbon along the edges of the image, this mounted on slightly larger Chinese paper leaves.
10837
notes:
These beautifully vivid images depict stages in the Chinese production process for tea, from preparing the ground for planting to weighing tea chests for export. Although they may resemble enamel paintings, they are actually watercolours on pith paper. Pith is not manufactured, but derived by cutting the inner spongy tissue of a small tree, Tetrapanax papyriferum, which is indigenous to southern China and Taiwan. Most pith paper watercolours, like these examples, are unsign...
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