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CHINA ARQUEOLOGIA golden-age-chinese-archayeolog

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Painted pottery ping flask

Height 31.8 (12.40), diam. at base 6.8 (2 Viz),

diam. at mouth 4.5 (i 3 /4)

Neolithic Period, Late Banpo Culture

(c. 4000-3500 BCE)

From Dadiwan, Qin'an, Gansu Province

Gansu Provincial Museum, Lanzhou

The head modeled from the vessel's short neck

is remarkable as an early testament to the interest

in human physiognomy and to the Neolithic artist's

ability to represent the human form in plastic

terms. 1 The face, described with broad cheeks and

a small chin, is probably intended to portray a boy

or young man. The slightly slanting plane of the

face shows three short horizontal incisions marking

the eyes and mouth. The carefully shaped nose

has two small holes indicating the nostrils, and

the protruding ears are pierced by a circular hole

at the center. The hair, shown by vertical grooves,

is combed forward over the brow and trimmed in

an even line across the forehead and around the

back of the neck. At the level of the vessel's mouth,

the head is abruptly cut off, but the full shape of

the crown may originally have been supplied by

a lid or stopper, possibly secured by cords tied

through the holes in the ears.

Vessels adorned with plastic renditions of human

heads are a rare occurrence. They have been

found for the most part in Gansu and Qinghai

provinces in association with the Banshan and Machang

cultures of the late third millennium. 2 One

other example datable to Banpo times was discovered

at Luonan in eastern Shaanxi. 3 The Luonan

head, apparently that of a young girl, is more completely

and sensitively articulated than the one in

the exhibition, and counts as a small masterpiece

of its genre. Its discovery so far away from Dadiwan

suggests that heads such as these may have been a

subspecialty in pottery workshops across the entire

Banpo settlement area.

The designs painted on the red-slipped body

of the vessel are unrelated to the human head and

comply with the decorative conventions current in

61 I YANCSHAO CULTURE: BANPO

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