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Interreligious and Global Perspective of Christian Art in China, 1552–1644
Interreligious and Global Perspective of Christian Art in China, 1552–1644
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Description
This book considers how European and Asian Christian missionaries communicated religious doctrine through the visual arts in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Greater China.
Zooming in on these rich cross-cultural and inter-religious artifacts, Susangeline Patrick reveals how Christian images and visual culture reflected, interacted with, and influenced spiritual and sociopolitical powers during the period. Across eight chapters, Patrick expands the meaning of “liturgical art” within this historical and geographical context, locating religious visual arts within alternative spheres such as Christian charitable institutions, cartography, and bodily behavior, intentionally shedding light on Christian women's initiatives and participation in art, devotion, and power. In essence, this book underscores the interreligious and global aspects of encounters which shaped and impacted the production, circulation, and outcome of devotional art.
Table of Contents
One: Ad Maiorem Dei Gloriam: The Jesuits and Chinese Catholic Art
Two: Poverty and Suffering: Franciscans and Art
Three: Simplicity and Piety: Augustinians and Art
Four: Our Lady of the Rosary: Dominicans and Art
Five: Harmonizing the World: The Poor Clares and Art
Six: Asian Catholics, Their Art, and Visual Culture
Seven: Catholic Visual Culture, Art, and Public Piety
Eight: Protestant Visual Culture in Early Modern Taiwan
Conclusion: Art, Power, and Religion
Appendices
Bibliography
Index
Product details
| Published | 06 Aug 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Ebook (Epub & Mobi) |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 280 |
| ISBN | 9781978767393 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 20 bw illus |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Susangeline Patrick's scholarly breadth is on full display in this book. Art as contextualization, art as spiritual battleground, art as power, devotion, and didactic tool. She masterfully weaves together the history of five religious orders and four continents. Patrick's attention to the visual culture of Asian women, Protestants, and the mendicant orders fills a lacuna in the scholarship. A concise, evocative, and stimulating text. Highly recommended.
Anneke H. Stasson, Indiana Wesleyan University
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This book is a great contribution for researchers as well as general readers who wish to understand 16th and 17th century Catholic and Protestant missionary enterprises in China and Taiwan. It not only raises significant questions and arguments but offers comprehensive resources for anyone wishing to undertake further study on this subject.
Changhua Lin, National Taiwan University
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Patrick offers a rich introduction to the intersection of Christian art, culture, and devotion in late imperial China, Macau, and Taiwan. She expands the narrative beyond Jesuit missions to explore the artistic endeavors of Franciscans, Dominicans, Augustinians, the Poor Clares, and Dutch Calvinists. Based on a masterful synthesis of multilingual up-to-date scholarship, her engaging volume illuminates how Christian visual culture-from church architecture to devotional objects-interacted with Buddhist, Daoist, and indigenous traditions; and how it was informed by diverse theological approaches. An accessible read for anyone fascinated by global history, cross-cultural encounters, and the transformative power of art.
Eugenio Menegon, Boston University

























