释义 |
K'ang-Hsi|kæŋʃiː| [Royal name of Hsüan-Yeh, emperor of China 1661–1722.] Used attrib. with ref. to the Chinese pottery and porcelain of the latter half of the seventeenth century and the first quarter of the eighteenth, notable for very fine blue-and-white wares and the development of famille verte and famille noire enamels.
1906S. W. Bushell Chinese Art II. viii. 33 The use of cobalt as a ground wash, foreshadowing the greater triumphs of the coming K'ang Hsi epoch. 1934Burlington Mag. Mar. p. xv/1 The K'ang Hsi figures of Kuan-yin..are especially remarkable. 1937E. Linklater Juan in China xii. 213 A small flower-painted black vase. ‘K'ang-hsi,’ she said. 1943D. Welch Maiden Voy. xxii. 188 The K'ang-Hsi blue and white which the Dean was buying for his grey-walled room at home. 1965D. Torr Diplomatic Cover vi. 103 Powder blue Chinese vases, a Sèvres biscuit group, a Nevers faience jug and the precious little Kang Hsi figures. |