The Easel

8th April 2025

In a New Exhibition at The Met, Chinoiserie Gets a Feminist Framing

When fine Chinese porcelain first arrived in 16th century Europe, its translucence, white colour and blue designs ignited a “Chinoiserie” craze. Europeans saw China as “exotic” and extended this fantasy to Chinese women – “goddesses, mothers, monsters, and performers”. Porcelain also became a metaphor for European womanhood – “fragile, delicate, and sharp when broken”. Porcelain was not culturally neutral as has been assumed. It embodied a “language” about how women were shown.

1st April 2025

A Light Touch in the Frick Expansion

New York’s Frick Collection is beloved for its masterpiece-laden art that is housed in an opulent Gilded-Age mansion museum. After five years of renovation, it is verdict time. Where new spaces have been created, “the scars don’t show”. Old and new have been blended deftly, getting “the richest result from the smallest betrayal”. With its beautiful wood and brass finishes, silk and wool wall coverings and gorgeous marble, The Frick remains “a temple to the tangible”. The writer’s verdict – “phew”.