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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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134

Bronze boshanlu censer inlaid with gold

Height 26.0 (lO 1 /*), diam. 15.5 (6V&)

Western Han Dynasty, late second century BCE

(c. 113)

From the tomb of Liu Sheng at Lingshan,

Mancheng, Hebei Province

Hebei Provincial Museum, Shijiazhuang

The censer 1 is exceptional both in its casting

and in its fine inlaid decoration. Swirling dragons

emerge from an openwork circular foot to support

a cup-shaped basin; the sea surges around large

rocks, which rise to form peaks around the basin's

lip. A tall rocky mountain, populated by small relief

creatures and humanlike beings, forms the lid (fig.

i), pierced by large holes between the crags.

Solid gold bands with fine incised lines form

the censer's base. Thin linear inlays and small

striations and circles indicate the texture of the

dragons' skin. The waves and their breaking crests

are imaginatively suggested by large inlaid gold

scrolls with pointed tips and small cloudlike extensions,

echoed in striations on the outcrops and on

the mountain itself. While the inlay closely resembles

a cloud scroll, it is plausibly a representation

of qi — the ultimate force or power of the universe,

embodied in clouds or moving waters, out of which

"all things condense and into which they dissolve." 2

(The concept of qi was formulated gradually during

the latter part of the Eastern Zhou period and

dominated Chinese thought from the Han period

onward.)

Such boshanlu ("universal mountain") censers

were common during the Western Han, but do not

seem to have existed prior to that period. During

the Late Eastern Zhou period, other forms of

censers seem to have been used, including openwork

bucket-shaped bronzes, which supported

burning aromatic branches or twigs. Earlier ceramic

and metalwork censers were formed by bowls on

stemmed feet, often with openwork covers composed

of animal figures 3 ; some of these resemble

creatures employed in decorative bronzework by

peoples on the borders of the Han empire, and it is

4O2 | EARLY IMPERIAL CHINA

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