
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Imperial Portrait of a Prince
China
- Date
- c. 1775
- Medium
- Hanging scroll, ink, colors, and gold on silk
- Department
- Asian Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
This painting is a life-size portrait of a Qing dynasty prince sitting on a red lacquer throne and wearing a dragon robe. Behind him is a screen richly decorated with nine dragons. Virtually every element of this painting symbolically represents the hierarchy of the Chinese court. Portraits of this scale, painted in exceptional detail with the finest mineral pigments on the most expensive silk, were typically hung in the great halls of the Forbidden City, the imperial palace in Beijing. The largest group of such portraits remains in the imperial collection itself, now in Taiwan. China, Asia
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Ancestral Portrait of a Prince
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Portrait of a Manchu Prince
Art Institute of Chicago

Ancestral Portrait of a Princess
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Imperial throne
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Carved Lacquer Scroll Box
Cleveland Museum of Art

Imperial Curtain Hanging
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Nine Dragon Box
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Portrait of an Official
Cleveland Museum of Art

Cover for a Carved Lacquer Scroll Box
Cleveland Museum of Art

Base for a Carved Lacquer Scroll Box
Cleveland Museum of Art

Portraits of the Qianlong Emperor and His Twelve Consorts
Cleveland Museum of Art

Court Ladies in the Imperial Palace
Cleveland Museum of Art