2026 Workshops
Applications for 2026 workshops will open on February 2, the deadline to apply is March 2, 2026
Sign up for updates on future workshops and application information.
Workshop One
The Wan-go H.C. Weng Gift to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Host: Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Workshop Leaders:
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Jonathan Hay, New York University
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John Yiu, University of Hong Kong
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Nancy Berliner, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Dates: Monday, June 15–Friday, June 19, 2026
The June 2026 Workshop at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, will be led by Jonathan Hay (Institute of Fine Arts, NYU) and Shek-on John Yiu (Jao Tsung-I Petite Ecole, University of Hong Kong). The workshop will focus on the 2018 Wan-go H.C. Weng gift of several hundred paintings, calligraphies, and related materials collected over six generations of a single family. Mr. Weng was the great-great-grandson of the preeminent scholar Weng Tonghe (1830–1904), who assembled the core of the collection during the 19th century. The donation vastly expanded the Museum’s holdings of Ming, Qing, and Republican period painting and calligraphy, suggesting this workshop’s theme of the transformative gift. Over five days, participants will explore how the Weng donation has transformed the Museum’s later Chinese painting and calligraphy collection overall and in particular subfields.
Workshop Two
The Materiality and Visuality of Chinese Domestic Gods
Host: Royal Ontario Museum
Workshop Leaders:
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Susan Naquin, Princeton University
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Klaas Ruitenbeek, Berlin Museum of Asian Art
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Wen-chien Cheng, Royal Ontario Museum
Dates: Monday, August 17–Friday, August 21, 2026
The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) holds an extensive and unusually diverse collection of images of domestic gods. These images are crafted of many different materials and media, across a wide range of periods, classes, and geographic regions. Every traditional Chinese home included spaces for the worship of household gods and ancestors alike. This private setting allowed personal forms of veneration and was directed toward more intimate material presentations. Such representations of domestic deities have been marginalized by art-historical preferences for more upscale images made of finer materials.
This ROM workshop opens a rare window onto under-researched fields: not only the material creation of worship within the home, but also artisanal workshops, their tools, models, and conventions for making images of domestic gods in different media. Our investigations will provide fresh perspectives on popular iconography, the gendered representation of gods, the expected functions of images, and the challenges of dating, identification, and provenance. Through close analysis of the objects’ material and observable qualities, students are encouraged to consider the fluid nature of deities; and to question existing labels and frameworks.
We will examine statues, tablets, prints, paintings, and other types of objects. Students will also have the opportunity to investigate firsthand the varied materiality and workmanship manifested in artifacts made from metal, paper, wood, ceramic, clay, textile, and stone. The workshop leaders bring the experience of museum collecting, curatorial expertise, and deep familiarity with Chinese art, religion, and history. In addition, through sessions led by ROM conservators, participants will learn how modern conservation and scientific analysis can reveal important information about artifacts beyond what is visible on their surfaces.