Presenting China's Last Empress Dowager
The early 20th-century photograph of Empress Dowager Cixi captures political spin, Qing dynasty-style
- By Owen Edwards
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
If their intent was to rehabilitate Cixi’s reputation, they failed. In the Western press, she was portrayed as something like the mother of all dragon ladies, and the impression remained long after she died in 1908, having appointed China’s last emperor, Puyi.
After Xunling’s sister Deling married an American who worked at the U.S. embassy in Beijing, she moved to the United States (where she was known as Princess Der Ling). When she died, in 1944, the Smithsonian Institution purchased 36 of Xunling’s glass-plate negatives, the largest collection of them outside the Palace Museum in Beijing, from a dealer for $500. Of the 19 prints on display, two are originals and 17 are high-resolution images made from scans of the negatives.
Xunling remained in China, suffering from ailments probably brought on by the photographic chemicals he used. He died in 1943, during World War II, when he may have been unable to get necessary medicine. He was in his early 60s.
“Xunling’s photographs are significant less because they are important historical documents of the last regent of China, but more because of what they say about the willful use of photography to shape history,” says Callahan. “The Dragon Lady may have been behind the curve when it came to political reform, but she was ahead of it when it came to using the medium to control her image.”
Owen Edwards is a freelance writer and author of the book Elegant Solutions.
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Comments (5)
What great Photos of CIXI! Did "She" really have a Vision, of transient duration of a few seconds of T'SEEN "SHE" in all its radial Glory, first as the Art Medium: THE EYE OF THE DRAGON(also named Oculus Draconis, not to be confused with the Constellation DRACO as in Alpha Draconis,...Gamma Draconis,...Et Al.) then The actual Event in full Detonation? In a kind of way, Xunling was old imperial China's Matthew Brady of the Chinese throne-a Lost Vanished World to China as the Confederacy was to the South! In the 22nd Century what will be the Lost&Vanished-all Gone With the Wind? Yet through the Magical preservation of Photography with the help of a magnifying Lense(especially a cylindrical one), full concentration, and child-like "pretending" one can almost step into that lost Mirror of Time like Alice through the Looking glass! My Commendation and Praise for the Article: READY FOR HER CLOSE-UP, by Owen Edwards, page 42, the Smithsonian-October 2011.
Posted by Albert Andrew Stephen Kundrat on December 2,2012 | 08:05 PM
Nope, the Manchus do not bound their feet. Only the Han Chinese did.
Posted by Vincent on January 31,2012 | 09:44 AM
I'm fascinated by her wardrobe and what she was holding in her hand and its significance. Also, in addition to identifying the object (which looks a little like knitting needles and a ball of yarn), were her feet bound?
Posted by Mary Ann Raimond on October 7,2011 | 02:48 PM
I loved this article on Dowager Empress Cixi! She is one of the most interesting and intelligent rulers who failed to understand the swiftly changing world around her. She had absolute power and no real way to understand how to use it to fight for her rule or country. I have always blamed her for the ensuing disasters the befell the PRC. Had she truly cared for her subjects, I belive life would have been a little better for all in the Middle Kingdom.
Posted by Dianne Linam on October 1,2011 | 11:17 PM
"Portrait of an Empress", a chapter in my copy of the Pocket Gibbon's Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire seems to have forseen this Dragon Lady's downfall...regardless of how Gorgeous she thinks she is.
Posted by BeecomingBoudicca on September 22,2011 | 01:16 AM