Page 191 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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only surface detail — a decoration  of intaglio curls.
                                                                         An open tube at the  top of the  head may have
                                                                          served as a socket, but  its diameter is far larger
                                                                         than would be required to hold a plume or similar
                                                                         ornament.
                                                                            Several writers have pointed  to  a find of
                                                                         nearly two dozen small bronze masks in  southern
                                                                         Shaanxi province (the northern  periphery of the
                                                                         Upper Yangzi macroregion) as the  closest parallel
                                                                                                3
                                                                         to the  Dayangzhou example.  These masks are much
                                                                         smaller, however — about  15-20 centimeters  in
                                                                         length — and  were most likely affixed  to  a surface,
                                                                         such as a shield. The differences  notwithstanding,
                                                                         their design is similar: round  eyes that bulge  from
                                                                         round sockets, large noses with open  nostrils,
                                                                         squared teeth in open mouths, and flat, squared
                                                                         ears. Although related  images are known, most
                                                                         human faces in the  Shang period  feature eyes set
                                                                         into sockets with pointed  canthi.  Full lips are more
                                                                         common than teeth. Another relevant comparison
                                                                         is the  splayed figure on the  sides of a bronze drum
                                                                         said to come from  the  south  and now in the Sumit-
                                                                                           4
                                                                         omo Collection, Kyoto.  The shape of the  head,
                                                                         most of its features, and  especially the  horns are
                                                                         similar to the  Dayangzhou mask. Had the mask
                                                                         been  mounted on a torso, the  assemblage may have
                                                                         resembled the  figure  depicted  on the  drum. RT

                                                                         1  Xu 19963,334-352.
                                                                         2  Excavated in  1989 (XDM: 67); reported: Jiangxi 1997,131.
                                                                         3  The find was at Chenggu, Shaanxi province; see Tang
                                                                            1980  and  Li 1998!}. The  small masks are illustrated in
                            examples of anthropomorphic images — in bronze  Shaanxi  1979C, no. 116.
                                                                         4  Li Xueqin 1985, no. 129.
                            and jade; bodies, heads, and  faces; large freestand-
                                                     1
                            ing works as well as miniatures.  The many masks
                            and heads from the  Sanxingdui pits  (cats. 65-75),
                            moreover, have significantly increased the  total
                            number of examples, and the  importance of human
                            imagery can no longer be downplayed.
                                             2
                               This double mask  evidently was fitted  into a
                            stand  (or perhaps a torso) at its square stem. The
                            head  itself was cast in two parts: the  top  half  from
                            the  ears upward was joined to the  lower portion  to
                            create  an enclosed  form with perforations at eyes
                            and  mouth. Flat ears extend from  each side of the
                            face, as do large right-angled horns bearing the



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