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6.13: Chinese Wedding Procession Painting

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    362248
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    Chinese Wedding Procession Painting

    24.png

    Artist: Qing Dynasty
    Medium: ink and color on silk
    Art Historical Time Period: 18th century

    Chinese Wedding Procession Paintings from the Qing Dynasty show the elaborate rituals of marriage in detail. These scrolls or panels often include parades with musicians, gift-giving, and the bride being carried in a decorated sedan chair. For Chinese society, marriage was not only a personal union but also a contract between families that balanced love, tradition, and community values.

    The innovation of these works lies in their documentary quality. Artists carefully recorded costumes, rituals, and ceremonial objects, making the paintings both artistic and educational. The bright colors and fine brushwork highlight the joy of the event, while also reinforcing Confucian ideals of family harmony and social order. These paintings connected love and marriage with cultural identity.

    Their influence continues in how wedding imagery is used in modern China, from photography to film. These artworks preserved traditions that shaped not only Chinese art, but also public memory of what marriage meant. The idea of showing weddings as both spectacle and symbol of family unity continues to appear in art around the world.

    Vocabulary

    • Confucian relating to the teachings of Confucius, emphasizing order and respect

    Student Authors

    • Milton Lima ’27 and Alan Marquez ‘28

    References and Image Attribution

    • Metropolitan Museum of Art. (n.d.). Procession. In The Met Collection. https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/51622

    • Silbergeld, J. (1993). Chinese painting style: Media, methods, and principles of form. University of Washington Press.

    • Sullivan, M. (1999). The arts of China (4th ed.). University of California Press.

    • Image: “Grand Imperial Wedding of the Guangxu Emperor, vol. 7, leaf 5, Empress Xiaoding entering the palace in phoenix palanquin, by Qing Kuan, c. 1889, ink and color on silk - Peabody Essex Museum - DSC07870” via Wikimedia Commons by uploader Daderot, under the Public Domain Mark 1.0 (“PDM 1.0”). Modified from original.

       

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    6.13: Chinese Wedding Procession Painting is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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