Enfilade

Online Talk | Mei Mei Rado on Chinoiserie Textile Designs

Posted in lectures (to attend), online learning by Editor on June 25, 2026

From the Cooper Hewitt:

Mei Mei Rado | Chinoiserie Designs in Textiles

Online, 8 July 2026, 1pm (ET)

Curtain, 1774–1811, after Jean-Baptiste Pillement, printed by Bromley Hall, copperplate printed cotton plain weave (New York: Cooper Hewitt, American Textile History Museum Collection, 2016-35-101).

Join Cooper Hewitt for an illustrated talk exploring a selection of chinoiserie (Chinese-inspired) designs used in works on paper and textiles from Cooper Hewitt’s permanent collection.

During the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, innovative chinoiserie designs in European textiles vividly reflected the cross-cultural exchanges fostered by global networks of trade, Jesuit missions, diplomatic contacts, and colonial expansions. Print sources, including illustrated travel accounts and decorative vignettes by artists such as François Boucher and Jean Pillement, provided major inspirations for the chinoiserie motifs across various textiles mediums, ranging from tapestry and silk, to embroidery and printed cotton. Used for furnishings or fashionable dress, these textiles offered Europeans visual knowledge and imaginative engagements with a distant land and foreign culture. Meanwhile, European chinoiserie textiles also travelled back to China, where they sparked a very different set of perceptions and imagination of the West. This is the third and final program of our recent series exploring the connections between Chinese and Western art and design from the seventeenth through the nineteenth century.

Registration is available here»

Mei Mei Rado is Assistant Professor at Bard Graduate Center, New York. Her research focuses on the history of textiles, dress, and decorative arts in China and France from the eighteenth to the early twentieth centuries. Previously Dr Rado served as Associate Curator of Costume and Textiles at Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Her recent monograph The Empire’s New Cloth: Cross-Cultural Textiles at the Qing Court  (Yale University Press, 2025) was the winner of the 2026 Louis Gottschalk book prize of the American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies and a finalist for the 2026 Charles Rufus Morey book award of the College Art Association.

Jamie Kwan is the Assistant Curator of Drawings, Prints and Graphic Design at Cooper Hewitt. Before her time at Cooper Hewitt, Kwan served as the Associate Curator at the Wende Museum, an institution focused on the Cold War in Culver City, California. She has also held positions at the Morgan Library & Museum, J. Paul Getty Museum, Huntington Library, and Getty Research Institute.