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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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painted gray wares came to predominate throughout the China heartland area. The discovery of

a thriving and sophisticated tradition of painted ware at Taosi has begun to alter this perception.

The painted vessels at Taosi ware differ from the Yangshao ceramics in many ways, notably that

they were fashioned of low-fired earthenware decorated only after firing. The use of spiriform

patterns, however, suggests that elements of the older tradition of painted decoration had continued

uninterrupted as an ancillary tradition, at least in some areas of the Central Plains,

throughout Longshan times. The excavations at Dadianzi (cats. 41- 45) demonstrate that the

tradition of painted wares survived even into the early days of the Bronze Age. The existence of

this continuing and evolving tradition of painted decoration, in evidence at Taosi and later at

Dadianzi, begins to shed light on the question of how the decorative programs of some of the

earliest bronzes of the late Erlitou and Zhengzhou periods came to include spiriform patterns

and to maintain something of the more ancient syntax.

The presence of lacquerware at Taosi is especially noteworthy, because it may well be that

the colorful palette of the painted ceramics, distinguished from the monochrome painting tradition

of the earlier Yangshao ceramics, originated under the influence of lacquer painting. LF-H

i

No complete report of the Taosi excavations has as yet

appeared. The present text is based on the information

provided in Zhongguo Shanxi 1983, 30-42, pis. 4-7. An

initial report on the site was published in Zhongguo

Shanxi 1980,18-31, pis. 4-6. The metal bell from M 3296

and two pottery bells found elsewhere at the site are

discussed in Zhongguo Shanxi 1984,1069-1071, pi. 3.

Color illustrations of the Taosi site and some of the burial

objects are available in Wenwu jinghua 1993, pis. 35-40.

2 Two of the basins (cats. 25, 273) and the hu (cat. 263) are

known to have come from large tombs (M 3072, M 3073,

and M 3105, respectively). The size of the tombs that

contained the other three objects exhibited here is not

clear from the archaeological report.

3 Zhongguo Shanxi 1983, pi. 5:1.

108 LATE PREHISTORIC CHINA

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