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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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CHU LACQUERS

FROM HUBEI

PROVINCE

Lacquer is a natural substance extracted from a tree indigenous to the Far East, rhus verniciflua,

that grows in areas of up to five hundred meters in altitude with an average temperature of 8

to 20 degrees Celsius and an average annual rainfall of more than 60 millimeters. 1 Even under

ideal conditions, mature lacquer trees produce a very small quantity of the substance. Once

collected, raw lacquer (a highly toxic substance) needs to be clarified and processed before

being stored in airtight containers. Application of the lacquer to the underlying object and the

drying period between coats require specific conditions of temperature (between 25 and 30

degrees Celsius) and humidity (between 75 and 85 percent). The processing of lacquer and

manufacture of lacquerware thus required a succession of operations, and workshops included

highly skilled and specialized craftsmen.

The two present-day provinces that compose the approximate geographic area of the Chu

kingdom — Hunan and Hubei — have yielded an abundance of lacquerware dating back three

centuries prior to the advent of the Qin empire in 221 BCE. Several major discoveries were made

in the area during the twentieth century. In the 19305, Hunan was celebrated for the splendid

lacquerware discovered in uncontrolled digs around Changsha; some of these pieces are now

in museums and private collections in the West. In the 19605, a construction boom associated

with Hubei's rising population led to the discovery of several important sites in the Jiangling

area; in the years since, hundreds of tombs (some of them very large) have been excavated.

Recovered objects, often perfectly preserved, have yielded a wealth of information about

the development of lacquer techniques and decoration during what appears to have been the

most important period in the evolution of this craft. 2 The evidence suggests the development

of two independent traditions in lacquerware — one in the Chu kingdom, the other in the

Qin kingdom — prior to the formation of the empire.

Discoveries from Hunan and Hubei indicate that several categories of objects were lacquered

to take advantage of specific properties of the substance — the decorative aspect of its

glossy surface, its durability, its imperviousness to liquids, and its protective qualities. The contents

of Marquis Yi's tomb testify to the extensive and varied use of lacquer during the fifth

century in domestic objects (containers and utensils for daily life, furniture), musical instruments

(zithers, flutes, drums, mouth organs), weapons (shields, armor, halberd shafts), funerary

items (coffins, carved wooden figures), chariots, and architectural elements. 3 Lacquer was most

often applied to a wood base, but also to leather and bronze. The range of colors — at least

until the Han period — was limited; black and red lacquers, the latter made with cinnabar or a

substitute, were the most common. Motifs painted with two additional colors — yellow and

brown — begin to appear, however, on a few pieces of lacquerware from the fifth century BCE,

including items from the tomb of Marquis Yi. The tomb evidence (in particular, cats. 107 and in)

also testifies to the development of pictorial subjects in lacquerwork by the fifth century BCE.

A succession of innovations during the fourth century furthered the exploitation of the

decorative and technical properties of lacquer. Improvements in wood carving, together with

308 | CHU AND OTHER CULTURES

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