SUNQUA, CHINESE SCHOOL (Active 1830-1870)

Details
SUNQUA, CHINESE SCHOOL (Active 1830-1870)

The Foreign Cemetery on Dane's Island, Near Whampoa Anchorage, Circa 1847

Signed Sunqua, l.r., and paper label on reverse inscribed "A view of Dane Island in the Canton River/near Whampoa where American vessels usually/anchor on first arriving at Canton. The hill/is a very picturesque object and is a prominent/landmark in going up the river and was/selected as a suitable place for the burial/of foreigners. This painting represents the/monument erected by the government over/(the) remains of the Hon. Alexander H./(E) Verett June 28, 1847 (interrred?) on this island June 29th," oil on canvas, original painted frame--14 1/4 x 33in.
Provenance
Elinor Gordon, Villanova, Pennsylvania
Exhibited
De Cordova Museum, Lincoln, Massachusetts, "The China Trade: Romance and Reality," June - August, 1979.
Museum of American China Trade, Milton, Massachusetts, on loan 1971 - 1980.

Lot Essay

On August 28, 1784, more than six months after she had set out from New York, the Empress of China eased her way into the crescent of ships at Whampoa, fired thirteen guns in salute, and dropped anchor. Seventy miles above Macao, and ten miles below Canton, in the Pearl River lay this anchorage for trading vessels of many nations, where they waited for cargoes. The anchorage is suggested in this view by two ships located below a Western-style cemetery on Dane's Island. In the far right background looms Whampoa, dominated by the nine storey high pagoda venerated by the Chinese and viewed as an object of curiosity to Westerners first anchoring in the exotic land. Since foreign traders were not permitted on the Chinese mainland, small islands, such as Dane's Island, were designated for their use during the season as recreation areas to indulge in Chinese spirits supplied from makeshift taverns on the island. The island also served as the burial of the unfortunate Westerners who had suffered from disease and deprivation. The cemetery was a reminder that the China trade, immensely profitable for a select few, was also a long, arduous, and dangerous undertaking.

Sunqua, a painter working in Canton and Macao, was widely known for his paintings of ships, ports, and related landscapes of the China trade. His earliest works are easily identifiable by their distinctive compositions, technique of drawing trees, and the effect of morning light diffused throughout clouds. (See, Carl L. Crossman, The China Trade: Export Paintings, Furniture, Silver and Other Objects (Princeton, NJ, 1972), pp. 54-55; De Cordova Museum, The China Trade: Romance and Reality, (Lincoln, MA, 1979), exhib., June 22 - September 16, 1979.)

Two other versions of the same picture by Sunqua are known. One is in the Museum of the American China Trade, and is signed. Another, now in the collection of the Peabody Museum in Salem, Massachusetts, is discussed and illustrated in Carl L. Crossman, The Decorative Arts of China Trade, (Suffolk, England, 1991), p. 126, pl. 46.

For two related subject paintings sold at Christie's, Hong Kong, September 26, 1989, Lot 954, and October 9, 1990, Lot 1318.