Page 314 - The Golden Age of Chinese Archaeology: Celebrated Discoveries from the People’s Republic of China
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FIG. i.  Cat. 108:  profile;                                       coherence:  even the  most abstract  motifs are based
      lid and handles from  above.                                       on the dragon  pattern.
      After Hubei 1994, cat. 9.
                                                                            Clearly, the  dou presented  a number of techni-
                                                                         cal challenges to its craftsmen — challenges that
                                                                         they met with remarkable skill and inventiveness.
                                                                         Even had lathe turning been available to the  arti-
                                                                         sans (it was not  introduced  until the  very end  of the
                                                                         fifth century  or the beginning  of the fourth), the
                                                                         oval shape of the  cup and the  lid would have pre-
                                                                         cluded use of the technique. Though mortise-and-
                                                                         tenon joinery was a common technique  in the  Chu
                                                                         lacquerware workshops of the period, and might
                                                                         have been  used to attach  separately carved handles
                                                                         to the  cup, the  object was carved out  of a solid
                                                                         piece  of wood. The limited palette  available to lac-
                                                                         quer artisans of the  period  (essentially, red and
                                                                         black) was overcome by using a combination of
                                                                         techniques for ornamentation — engraving, carved
                                                                         relief, and painting; indeed  the  craftsmen seem to
                                                                         have made use of all possible solutions within their
                                                                         limited range  of decorative  possibilities.  A yellow
                                                                         lacquer may have been  used  as well for the  cup's
                                                                         surface decoration; the  excavators of the  site report
                                                                         that traces of a gold  (or gold-yellow) pigment were
                                                                         visible on the  dou when it was found  but vanished
                                                                         soon  afterward. Certainly, the  color was available:
                            the dragons' bodies are composed of abstract orna-  yellow lacquer appears in the paintings on the
                            ments with no zoomorphic attributes. The handles  inner and  outer  coffins  of Marquis Yi. 2  AT
                            draw the  dragon motif out to an even greater level
                                                                         1  Excavated in  1978; published:  Hubei 1989,1:368-369,
                            of complexity: only two heads, staring at each  other  fig. 227; 2: color pi. 15 and  pi. 132; Tokyo 1992, no. 12;
                            with almond-shaped eyes, can be clearly seen.  Hubei 1994, no.  9; Tokyo 19983, no. 12.
                            Each seems to be holding the  rim of the  cup in its  2  Hubei 1989,1:28.
                            mouth — or perhaps trying to get at food inside.
                               In contrast, the  surface decoration  of the  ob-
                            ject, composed  of geometric designs rendered  in
                            various contrasting  techniques,  seems less fluid —
                            even static. Some of these designs are engraved
                            and their lines filled with red color against a black
                            background; others  are  simply painted  on. A few
                            intertwined motifs are outlined in black against
                            a background composed of thin, parallel red lines
                            that intersect  at right angles. The remaining de-
                            signs, flat and plain, are set in red against black,
                            or in black against red. The diversity of the  design
                            does  not, however, entirely mask a fundamental



                            313  I  CHU  L A C Q U E R S  FROM  HUBE I
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