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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Terra-cotta figure of a middle-ranking officer

Height 190 (74 3 A)

Qin Dynasty, third century BCE (c. 210) ,

From Pit 2 at Xiyangcun, Lintong, Shaanxi Province

Qin Terra-cotta Museum, Lintong, Shaanxi Province

A member of an infantry formation accompanying

a chariot, this middle-ranking officer 1 is distinguished

from the lower-ranking soldiers by his

armor of overlapping rectangular plates (representing

lacquer-coated leather), joined with cords and

rivets; epaulieres cover his shoulders and upper

arms. A tunic extends below his knees, and he

wears squared shoes. The figure's left hand probably

originally held a sword; the fingers of the right

hand grasp another weapon (now lost). The hands

of the Qin army figures were created through a

combination of molding and modeling and then

inserted into the hollow arms. Their manufacture

exemplifies the module system, which rationalized

and speeded the production process: using doubleor

single-section molds, the artisans created palms,

to which fingers (usually separately modeled) were

then attached. Working with a limited number of

prefabricated variations, the sculptors created several

basic forms — hands with fingers bent or with

fingers outstretched — that could be fitted to various

types of bodies. 2

The officer's face, with its elaborately styled

mustache and beard, displays a remarkably vivid,

attentive expression; individualized features include

the incised wrinkles that crease his forehead. The

detailed treatment of the Qin warriors' faces has led

some scholars to identify the figures as portraits of

individuals; 3 others have divided the physiognomies

into types and identified these with particular

regions from which the ranks of the Qin army were

drawn. 4 The faces, however, are to a large extent

stereotypical, a fact directly related to their mass

production. The artisans used a variety of standardized,

molded components to create the heads of

the figures; combinations of particular elements

and hand finishing "individualized" the figures. 5

That the terra-figures do not convey distinct, indi-

373 | TERRA-COTTA ARMY, LINTONC

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