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Chinese Lacquer Art
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| Painted lacquer case, late Warring Period
(476-256 BC) | Lacquerworks in the Warring Period
(770-256BC) represented unusually high levels in terms of design and coloring.
The painted lacquer mirror case "Panorama of the Journey" unearthed in a tomb in
jinmen, Hubei, vividly showcases the life of its owner, known as a masterpiece
of the time.
Chinese lacquer art came into its golden age during the Han
Dynasty (206BC-220AD). At that time, the court, nobilities and local merchants
regarded lacquer wares as symbols of fortune and status. In order to satisfy
personal material needs, they spent numerous human and financial resources to
make exquisite lacquer wares. Decoration techniques witnessed new developments
in the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD); inlaid gold and silver pattern appeared on the
lacquer wares at that time.
During the ensuing Jin (265-420AD) and Northern and Southern Dynasties
(420-589AD), thanks to the introduction and widespread of Buddhism in China,
lacquer art began to be applied to Buddha sculptures. One of the important
excavations of this time is a lacquer wood screen unearthed in a tomb in Datong,
Shanxi Province. The screen, carved with black inscriptions and painted in red
lacquer, has lacquer paintings on it, which is based on "Legends of Heroic
Women" of the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD). This lacquerwork is a masterpiece both
for its painting and calligraphy.
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| Gilded black lacquer plate, Qing Dynasty
(1644-1911 ) | One of the prominent achievements of the
Tang Dynasty (618-907AD) is its progress in lacquerwork techniques. For
instance, gold and silver pieces are cut into different patterns to be embedded
in lacquer roughcasts and polished. Thus exquisite lacquerworks came into
being.
Lacquer art was further developed in the following Song Dynasty
(960- 1279AD). The flourishing economy and stable society gave rise to varieties
of lacquer wares, among which the most distinctive style is single-color
lacquerwork. Though deprived of decorative patterns and designs, single-color
lacquerwork were made with extremely meticulous craftsmanship.
In the Ming Dynasty, a famous craftsman named Huang Cheng, based on
experiences of his own and previous craftsmen, wrote the first book on lacquer
art. The book was later annotated by another famous lacquer craftsman, which
make it China's only completer theoretic works on lacquer art.
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