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This essay undertakes a micro-historical examination of a rare Chinese silk scroll portrait of Queen Victoria, produced during the First Opium War (1839–1842) and now preserved in the British Museum. The portrait, rendered in the Chinese gongbi style with elements of Western chiaroscuro, reimagines the young monarch within the aesthetic framework of meiren hua (paintings of beauties), a genre associated with feminine grace and decorum in late imperial China. By contextualizing the artefact within the sociopolitical dynamics of mid-nineteenth-century Qing China, the essay investigates the divergent perceptions of Queen Victoria among the Manchu ruling elite and the Han Chinese populace. While the Qing court viewed her as a barbarian usurper challenging Confucian principles, Han Chinese communities, especially those along the southern coast, pragmatically interpreted her image as a potential counterbalance to Manchu hegemony. The portrait’s fusion of stylistic traditions underscores the complex interplay of cultural negotiation and imperial power. Through an interdisciplinary analysis of the artefact’s artistic, linguistic, and historical dimensions, this study demonstrates how the scroll transcends its function as a diplomatic token, emerging as a subtle critique of established hierarchies and a conduit for marginalized perspectives during a period of great transformation.
Di Cotofan Wu (Fri,) studied this question.