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EMPHASIS ON VISUAL AND TACTILE EXPERIENCES: MECHANICAL TREATMENTS OF BRONZES AND JADES IN ANCIENT CHINA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2024

Kin Sum (Sammy) Li*
Affiliation:
Kin Sum (Sammy) Li, 李建深, Hong Kong Baptist University; email: kinsumli@hkbu.edu.hk.
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Abstract

This article presents fresh evidence and arguments regarding the historical study of sensory experience through a focus on the mechanical treatments of bronzes and jades in ancient China. The techniques employed to polish and engrave hard bronze surfaces before the invention of iron tools that are harder than bronze remain a mystery. The article provides new insights into engraved/chiseled bronze inscriptions, which can be too easily dismissed by connoisseurs as fake. Through a focus on post-processing techniques for cast bronze objects made before 1 b.c.e. in China and exchanges of techniques between bronze producers and jade workers, I argue that some of the traces found on bronze objects that may have been left by working with abrasives such as those used in lapidary industry demonstrate that lapidary techniques and post-processing of cast bronze objects were interrelated. Investigations as to how bronze and jade producers interacted show that they aimed to improve the visual and tactile experiences for their customers or patrons. Active and frequent exchanges of ideas and techniques took place between the bronze and jade production communities. Their emphasis on visual and tactile experiences demonstrates how such industrial powers developed in ancient China and how they were sustained throughout the last two millennia b.c.e.

提要

提要

本文為古代中國青銅與玉石的機械處理的歷史與感官經驗研究提供新證據與論述。鐵工具比青銅硬,但在鐵工具發明之前,如何在青銅表面刻劃與打磨是一個謎。本文也為刻劃或者鑿刻而成的青銅銘文的製造提供新思考,畢竟這些銘文太容易被鑑定專家認為是偽造的,因此這類問題還需要進一步探討。透過研究在公元紀年前中國青銅器的鑄後處理技術,以及青銅與玉石工匠的技法交流,本文論述玉石行業中使用的解玉砂可能也應用在青銅表面的刻鑿過程中,顯示玉石的處理手法與青銅的鑄後處理有緊密關係。青銅與玉石工匠的緊密聯繫反映了他們皆關心其產品提供給使用者的視覺與觸覺體驗。青銅與玉石生產行業有着頻繁又活躍的思想與技藝交流。他們對產品視覺與觸覺的關心與體現揭示了公元前兩千紀內中國產業的發展史。

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Society for the Study of Early China
Figure 0

Table 1. Hardness (scratch resistance) of materials from ancient China20

Figure 1

Figure 1a. Bronze mirror from Hunan Changsha Yuanjialing Datong Xiaoxue M2. Diameter 11.4 cm. Changsha Municipal Museum, zongzhanghao 4817, fenleihao 1B313, c. 300 b.c.e. Photo by the author.

Figure 2

Figure 1b. Detail of the reflective side (front) of the Changsha-Xiaoxue mirror. Photo by the author.

Figure 3

Figure 1c. Detail of one of the slanting-T main motifs on the decorative side (back) of the Changsha-Xiaoxue mirror. Photo by the author.

Figure 4

Figure 1d. Detail of the back of the Changsha-Xiaoxue mirror. Photo by the author.

Figure 5

Figure 1e. Detail of the edge of the back of the Changsha-Xiaoxue mirror. Photo by the author.

Figure 6

Figure 2. Bronze mirror from Changsha Renminlu Jianshe yinhang M1. Diameter 10.5 cm. Changsha Municipal Museum, zongzhanghao 17142, fenleihao unknown, c. 300 b.c.e. Photos by the author.

Figure 7

Figure 3. Bronze mirror from Changsha Yuanjialing—Jing M3. Diameter 11.3 cm. Changsha Municipal Museum, zongzhanghao 1645, fenleihao 1B213, c. 300 b.c.e. Photos by the author.

Figure 8

Figure 4. Cylindrical piece ready to be drilled out from raw jade. Qijia culture, c. 2200–1500 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., Zhongguo guyu tudian, 29, fig. 7.

Figure 9

Figure 5. Bronze weight from the mausoleum complex of Qin Shihuang and magnified images of the character zhi 之 in the inscription of Qin Shihuang's edict about regulating the measurement systems. Height 7 cm, weight 256 g. Qin Shihuang's Mausoleum Site Museum, accession no. 2838. 209–207 b.c.e. Photos by the author.

Figure 10

Figure 6. Bronze container bearing the inscription of Qin Shihuang's edict on regulating measurement systems and magnified images of the character nai 乃 in the edict cast on one side of the Qin Shihuang container. Length 19 cm, capacity 216 cm3. Shanghai Museum, accession no. 46425, c. 221–207 b.c.e. Photos by the author.

Figure 11

Figure 7. Cast inscription under the handle of a bronze jue. Freer Gallery of Arts, accession no. 1956.19. Shang dynasty. After Gettens, The Freer Chinese Bronzes, 2:143, fig. 181.

Figure 12

Figure 8. Cast inscription on a bronze gu 觚. Freer Gallery of Arts, accession no. 1940.3. Shang dynasty. After Gettens, The Freer Chinese Bronzes, 2:142, fig. 178.

Figure 13

Figure 9. Cast inscription after grinding on a bronze gui 簋. Freer Gallery of Arts, accession no. 1911.38. Shang dynasty. After Gettens, The Freer Chinese Bronzes, 2:151, fig, 193.

Figure 14

Figure 10. Two characters on one of the Jin Hou Su bells. Shanghai Museum, c. 846 b.c.e. After Ma Chengyuan, “Jinhou Su bianzhong,” 16, fig. 2.

Figure 15

Figure 11. Chiseled strokes of the characters, sigong 寺工, of the inscription on the No. 860 bronze lance from the mausoleum complex of Qin Shihuang. Qin Shihuang's Mausoleum Site Museum, c. 259–210 b.c.e. After Li et al., “Inscriptions, Filing, Grinding and Polishing Marks,” 495, fig. 5.

Figure 16

Figure 12. The author's simulation experiment of using an iron knife to engrave on a bronze plate (85 percent copper) and magnified images of the engraved lines. Photos by the author.

Figure 17

Figure 13. The “Shang Yang” bronze container and magnified images of the character yi 壹 in the inscription of Qin Shihuang's edict cast on the base of the container. Length 19 cm, capacity 202 cm3. Shanghai Museum, accession no. 44331, c. 221–207 b.c.e. Photos by the author.

Figure 18

Figure 14. Magnified images of the character shi 十 in the chiseled inscription about Shang Yang on one side of the “Shang Yang” container. Photos by the author.

Figure 19

Figure 15. Magnified images of the character er 二 in the chiseled inscription about Shang Yang on one side of the “Shang Yang” container. Photos by the author.

Figure 20

Figure 16. Detail of the character yue 月 in the chiseled inscription about Shang Yang on one side of the “Shang Yang” container. Photos by the author.

Figure 21

Figure 17. Detail of the character zhong 眾 in the chiseled inscription about Shang Yang on one side of the “Shang Yang” container. Photos by the author.

Figure 22

Figure 18. Chiseled inscription on the upper part of the Yangpingjia bronze lamp support. Shanghai Museum, accession no. 48298, 38–34 b.c.e. Photo by the author.

Figure 23

Figure 19. Detail of the character hua 畫 in the chiseled inscription on the Yangpingjia lamp support. Photos by the author.

Figure 24

Figure 20. Detail of the characters jia 家 (upper two sub-images) and yang 陽 (bottom sub-image) in the chiseled inscription on the Yangpingjia lamp support. Photos by the author.

Figure 25

Figure 21. Sand grit inside the tracks of strokes of different characters in the chiseled inscription on the Yangpingjia lamp support. Photos by the author.

Figure 26

Figure 22. Unfinished jade. Hongshan culture, c. 3300–2000 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., Zhongguo guyu tudian, 29, fig. 9.

Figure 27

Figure 23. Jade comb from M27 of Burial Mound No. 1 at the second location at the Liaoning Chaoyang Niuheliang site. Length 28.6 cm, thickest point 0.6 cm. Housed in the Liaoning Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology. Hongshan culture, c. 3300–2000 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., eds., Zhongguo chutu yuqi quanji, vol. 2, 133.

Figure 28

Figure 24. Jade pendant from M1 of Burial Mound No. 1 at the fifth location at the Liaoning Chaoyang Niuheliang site. Length 20.9 cm, thickness 0.9 cm. Housed in the Liaoning Provincial Institute of Cultural Relics and Archaeology. Hongshan culture, c. 3300–2000 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., eds., Zhongguo chutu yuqi quanji, vol. 2, 131.

Figure 29

Figure 25. Unfinished tube-shaped jade slit ring from House 22, Xinglonggou, Inner Mongolia, c. 6000 b.c.e. After Yang Hu et al., eds., Yuqi qiyuan tansuo: Xinglongwa wenhua yuqi yanjiu ji tulu, 124.

Figure 30

Figure 26. Jade coiled dragon from Balinyouqi Yangchangxiang E'ergenwusu, Inner Mongolia. Height 16.3 cm, width 11.5 cm, diameter of the large hole 3–3.4 cm. Housed in the Balinyouqi Museum. Hongshan culture, c. 3300–2000 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., eds., Zhongguo chutu yuqi quanji, vol. 2, 22.

Figure 31

Figure 27. Stone disc from Wengniuteqi Danangou, Inner Mongolia. Diameter 12.1 cm. Housed in the Chifeng 赤峰 Museum. Xiaoheyan culture, c. 3000 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., eds., Zhongguo chutu yuqi quanji, vol. 2, 57.

Figure 32

Figure 28. Jade hairpin finial, inlaid with turquoise, from M202 at Shandong Linxu Xizhufeng. Length 9 cm, thickness 0.45 cm. Housed in the Institute of Archaeology, CASS. Longshan culture, c. 2500–2000 b.c.e. After Gu Fang et al., eds., Zhongguo chutu yuqi quanji, vol. 4, 19.