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Chinese Lacquer Art
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| Painted fish-pattern lacquer vessel, Qin
Dynasty (221-206 BC) | Over the longstanding Chinese
history, numerous treasures and heritages have been left behind, among which the
lacquer art is a brilliant one. China is the earliest country in the world using
natural lacquer. In the early 1970s, archeologists unearthed a red lacquer wood
bowl in an excavation in the Neolithic Hemudu remains in Yuyao, Zhejiang
Province. It is estimated that the bowl was made 7,000 years ago, the oldest
existing lacquer ware in the world.
Traditional Chinese lacquer art applies natural lacquer liquid from lacquer
trees. China is abundant in lacquer resources. Lacquer trees in Mainland China
are distributed in some 550 counties in 23 provinces.
Starting from red lacquer wood bowls and painted potteries in the Neolithic
age, Chinese lacquer art enjoyed rapid development in the Warring Period
(770-256BC) and the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD), thanks to the upgraded
productivity of the time.
According to historical documents, lacquer trees were widely planted during
the Warring Period (770-256BC). Famous philosopher Zhuang Zi, founder of Daoism,
worked as an official overseeing lacquer plantations for some time. At that
time, lacquer was regarded as important as daily necessities such as linen,
mulberry, fish and salt, and lacquer craftsmanship were remarkably raised. There
were wood, bamboo and linen lacquer wares. Linen lacquerwork, not restrained
from material sources, can be made in any shape. The improved craftsmanship gave
rise to a multitude of lacquerwork varieties.
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Red lacquer bowl | The Warring Period
(770-256BC) embraced the first peak of lacquer art development, which continued
into the Western Han Dynasty (206BC-25AD). Unearthed objects indicate that
lacquer wares in the Warring Period (770-256BC) had substantially surpassed the
previous ages in terms of varieties, production output and scope of
distribution. In the Warring Period (770-256BC), lacquer wares were used in
every sphere of society, including daily utensils, music instruments, tomb wares
and even weapons. People of Chu, living in Hubei, like red color and made a
large number of red lacquer wares. Their lacquer works featured two basic
colors, red and black, creating unique visual effect. Red and black lacquerworks
have been characteristic of Chinese lacquer art.
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