coromandel screen การใช้
- A Chinese coromandel screen was set up in the State Dining Room in 1961.
- One area is a chinoiserie room with a 12-panel Coromandel screen and lacquered furniture.
- Lord Leighton's brightly colored studio has been recreated with rented film props _ Indian tables, Syrian ware and Coromandel screens.
- Although made in China, Coromandel screens were named for English East India Co .'s port on the Coromandel coast of India, a post on the way to the West, through which the screens were shipped.
- Having rather dwindled, prices for Coromandel screens revived somewhat with the influx of Chinese money into the art market, and a screen fetched well over estimate at $ US 602, 500 in 2009, then the record price, selling to a dealer from Asia.
- After a brief partnership with a dressmaker named Rose Roth, Carnegie had a boutique on the Upper West Side, which was then quite fashionable; in 1923, she moved her salon to a town house at 42 E . 49th St ., which she decorated with French antiques and Coromandel screens.
- The most common type of object made in the style, both for Chinese domestic use and exports was the "'Coromandel screen "', a large folding screen with as many as twelve leaves, coated in black lacquer with large pictures using the " kuan cai " ( literally " incised colors " ) technique, sometimes combined with mother of pearl inlays.
- The Victoria and Albert Museum paid ?, 000 for a screen in 1900, whereas one in the famous Hamilton Palace Sale of 1882 had only fetched ?89 . In Vita Sackville-West's novel " The Edwardians ", published in 1930 but set in 1905 10, a " coromandel screen " is mentioned as being in a room that is " impersonal, conventional, correct ", typifying the style of those who " unquestioningly followed the expensive fashion ".