Chinese Technology and Art By Susan Daly. Map of China.

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Chinese Technology and Art By Susan Daly

Transcript of Chinese Technology and Art By Susan Daly. Map of China.

Page 1: Chinese Technology and Art By Susan Daly. Map of China.

Chinese Technology and Art

By

Susan Daly

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Mapof

China

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Sanxingdui BronzesNeolithic Culture

Shu KingdomChengdu,China

Sichuan Province.

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Map showing location

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Finding the siteIn the 1920’s farmers started finding jade objects and a few pieces of bronze in their fields. They reported these objects and China sent out archaeologists to uncover their source. They found a large cache of jade objects from the Shu Kingdom. It wasn’t until later in the century, that the two ceremonial pits were found. These contain the bulk of the bronze objects on display. The museum was built to house them and work continues to excavate the area for more Shu objects.

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In July,1986 a major archaeological find emerged near Sanxingdui in western

China. Two sacrificial pits were uncovered. Pit 1 was dug during the 14th century bce while pit 2 was dug during

the 11th century bce.Over 1,000 exquisite bronze artifacts were found.

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Jade Ge daggars

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Jade is not found naturally in this area so it was a trade good. It was

always considered valuable. Working jade required patience and

technical skill.

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Bronze Tree

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During the 16th -13th centuries BCE, Chinese bronze casting evolved further.

Many ritual vessels for wine were cast as well as bronze weapons .Animal mask

decorations were used to decorate many of these vessels as bronze moulding

techniques became increasingly sophisticated.

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Top of the tree

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Part of the tree

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Bird at base of the Tree

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Bronze hinge

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Unique Bronze Masks

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Bronze Mask

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Braided hair in back

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Inside a bronze mask- showing its construction techniques.

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A Gold Covered Mask

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Headgear worn by masks

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The Terra Cotta Armyof

Emperor Shi-HuangdiFounder of the Qin dynasty

X’ian, China

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In 1974, several farmers digging a well found the Terra Cotta Army in

their field. They called in local authorities to examine the pieces they had uncovered. As they dug into this field , the archaeologists uncovered

the army.They found 3 pits , each with different soldiers in them.

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Digging this well caused the army to be discovered in 1974.

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A group of ceremonial guards

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Pit Number One

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What kinds of technology would have been used to create 7,000 life-size

figures out of clay ?What kinds of materials would have been needed to produce the statues and to fire them in kilns so they wouldn’t break as

easily?

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This pit contains over 6,ooo soldiers

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Putting the army back together

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The army being reassembled

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The bundles are missing pieces

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When archaeologists work at putting the soldiers back together, they find potential

pieces and create a bundle of them for each one. Then the workers searches for the location of a specific piece. If they find

ONE PIECE in a day, they are very happy. Putting this gigantic puzzle back together

will be the life’s work of many archaeologists.

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Individual Faces

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An officer and his horse

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An archer without his bow

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Moustaches

• Archaeologists have found 24 different types of moustaches on the soldiers faces. They show the range of social classes which the army came from. Individual differences could indicate social status or simply personal preference.

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Officers in the front in battle formation

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Another view

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Cavalry troops

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Bronze Chariot with umbrella

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A copy of this chariot is shown in the recent movie “ Hero “ which is about 3 people who want to kill the first emperor

of China, Shi Huangdi.Because bronze was expensive, the

model is only 2/3’s life size.

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The Great Wall

Badaling Pass near Beijing

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When Emperor Shi Hunagdi decided to connect all of the parts of earlier walls into one long wall, he forced thousands of peasants to work on this project for

him.There are supposed to be bones from many workers buried in each section of the wall. The entire wall is about 2500

miles long.

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We’ve climbed up a long way.

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• It ‘s a long way up !

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Very smoggy day

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Chinese Architecture in

BeijingForms and designs

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Chinese architecture of the Ming dynasty uses bright colors, painting

detailed scenes, roof tiles, roof guardians, and many marble fence posts. It looks very different than

western architecture. Power is shown by space not height.

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The Forbidden City was considered to be the center of the world by the Chinese. The Emperor

was to be at the center of the universe,so the main axis of the city is North-South. The Hall of

Supreme Harmony at the center of the city is where the Emperor held audiences.After entering

the city you passed through several halls and courtyards on your way to this audience. It was

meant to make you feel small.

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Arial view of Forbidden City

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From this view of the Forbidden City you can see the North-South axis and the way that Feng

Shui was used to design it. It must have a mountain at the back so they built an artificial one called Coal Hill. It was surrounded by a

moat which was the necessary water feature for an auspicious location. It is in concentric circles

within a square which represents heaven and earth.

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Forbidden City

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Each gate is narrow which contrasts with the large squares surrounding all gates. Together the depth and width of the space creates a sense of

mystery and a regal attitude.

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The dragon represents the Emperor while the phoenix represents the

Empress.

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Summer Palace, Beijing

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The Forbidden City was designed to be both beautiful and impressive. Its golden

yellow roof tiles made it stand out from all other buildings in the area.Although it

covers huge areas, it maintains harmony because of how it was designed.

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Nine is a lucky number in China. Notice the number of nails in each door.

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Summer Palace

• Golden Roof Tiles for an Imperial Residence.

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Roof Guardians

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The dragon is associated with the Emperor and is used extensively in the Forbidden City as a decorative element. These dragons serve as

downspouts to move water away from the hall to protect it. They are the embodiment of imperial

power but also serve a practical purpose.

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Emperor’s Dragon Way

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Hall of Supreme Harmony

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Inside the Hall of Supreme Harmony there are 66 great columns. The throne has

dragon decorations as does the screen behind it. The cross beams have dragons in yellow

decorating them. The Emperor’s cloak had dragons woven into it. Altogether there are

12,654 dragons in this room. A multiple of the auspicious number 9.

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Large pots are for Fire prevention

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All buildings must have water in front of them and mountains at the back pointing to the sun because of the ideas of Feng Shui. In this case the water also served the practical feature of

protecting wooden structures in case of fire.The large pots are found all over the Forbidden City.

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A marble railing

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Private Gardens of the Emperor

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Temple of Heaven

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The Temple of Heaven is where the Emperor made sacrifices to assure bountiful harvests .

China was an agricultural society so the importance of this sacrifice was shown by the

emperor himself offering it up to the heavens.The hall itself is high and is a symbol

for the heavens. All carvings inside are of clouds.

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Lamma Temple was built by the Ming Emperor’s as a home away from home for

the Dalai Lama of Tibetan Buddhism. When he visited Beijing, he lived here.

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A gate to Ming Tombs

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Architecture of X’ianWestern Capital City

Starting place of the Silk Roads

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Houses from the Train to X’ian

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Contrast of old and new

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X’ian Bell Tower

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X’ian City Wall

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Mosquein

X’ianIt looks just

like a Chinese temple except the writing is

in Arabic.

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Cultural Diffusion of religion.

Islam came to China along the

famous Silk Roads

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The summer Palace in X’ian

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A pavilion which sold fish food attracted hundreds of gold fish.

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Another stone boat

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Confucius

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Big Wild Goose Pagoda in X’ian

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Daoist monk

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Roof demon to scare away evil

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Chinese technology and art reflects the society which created it. How many places did you see dragons? Why might they appear

so often?What else did you learn about the

Chinese from these photos?

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Baodingshan GrottoA World Heritage Site

Dazu, China

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In China, Daoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism were all practiced

together by the Chinese people. The act of creating a religious image was considered to be an act of worship. In our tour of China we saw many people worshipping in temples we

visited across China.

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The carved statues at Baodingshan reflect the 3 religious traditions found in China at

the time they were created; Daoism, Confucianism, and Buddhism.The statues survived the Cultural Revolution because of isolation and the involvement of Chou

Enlai,a native of the area.

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Showing a son carrying his parents.

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Confucius ( on the right )

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Buddhist Wheel of life being held by a demon. He

can’t stop it.

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Our guide Jeff is explaining the

carvings we are learning about at

Dazu.

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Buddhism came to China along the Silk Roads from India where it was started in the 5th century

BCE by Siddarta Gautama.It brought with it several symbols shown in many Buddhist

images. The most familiar is the lotus flower, a symbol of purity, renunciation and divinity.

Buddha is often shown sitting on a lotus.

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Another important symbol is the Golden Wheel. The wheel represents motion, continuity and

change, forever moving onwards like the wheel of heaven.The eight spokes point in the eight directions and symbolize Buddha’s Eightfold Path: right understanding, right thought, right

speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration.

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Leshan carved Buddha- 25 stories tall

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Buddha’a hand can hold 100 people on it.

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Since the Taliban blew up the 2 Buddha’s at Bamyan, Afghanistan, Leshan is the largest carved statue of Buddha in the world. It is

mainly visible by boat from the river because it was carved where 3 rivers converge to stop the

many drownings which took place there and quiet the water. It did stop the rapids.There are stairs which circle the statue to allow you to get

several views of it as you climb around it.

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30 foot tall head

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Mt. Emei is over 10,000 feet tall. The act of climbing it, is also an act of worship. There are five different Buddhist monasteries at different

levels of the mountain.We visited 2 monasteries, Lingyuan and Wannian. At each stage, pilgrims

can stop, pray, and rest. There are four mountains sacred to Buddha in China.

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Lingyan Buddhist Temple Incense burners

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Lingyan Temple Bell

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Wannian Temple on Mt.

Emei

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A fish hanging in this direction says a pilgrim may stay for free here.

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Monastery buildings

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A Buddhist monk

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A Buddhist stupa

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The dam at Duijiangyan was built 2200 years ago to stop the flooding which was destroying the crops on the Chengdu plain. It is still being used and making that plain a very fertile area. The simple bamboo technology was effective

and ingenious.

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Looking towards a new dam being built upstream.

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A swinging bridge across the river.

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Nanjing Museum

Jade Gallery

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Shanghai Museum Bronze Gallery

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An interesting view

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A Ram’s head detail in bronze

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Another achievement is the development of written Chinese characters called calligraphy.It

takes about 10,000 characters to read a simple book.Chinese is much harder to learn to write

than English is.

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Calligraphy Lecture

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In China, the emperor was the only person who could have a yellow roof. He also wore yellow robes embroidered with dragons on them. Red is considered the color of happiness and good luck.White was the color of mourning death . As a

result brides wore red robes for weddings.