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Culture - Chinese Jewelry Design History
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The history of Chinese jewelry design
In Chinese jewelry history, much of Chinese jewelry is designed to adorn the costume rather than the person. Necklaces, bracelets, and earrings are comparatively rare, headdresses and elaborate hairpins being the more common forms attached to the person. Yet, in the traditional costume of recent times, ornate hooks and buckles were used to attach girdles, and women wore strings of beads, often multiple and variously spaced, with decorative plaques and other larger ornaments interspersed. The beads might be attached to the neck, head, or waist, and their purpose was to dignify the whole figure, rather than to display the fine quality of a curiously wrought gem. In any case, the splendor of the stuff of the costume, with richly woven or embroidered ornament, provided the distinctions of rank and wealth, and jewelry was often dispensed with altogether. The long sleeves and high collar of the garment left little of the person exposed for ornament set against the skin, in the manner favored in the West.
In the time of the Shang dynasty, in the last centuries of the 2nd millennium BC, bone and ivory hairpins with ends carved in the form of birds or abstract figures were a popular adornment. The many finely wrought, small jade plaques of the period, depicting animals in profile, are in many cases clearly intended for sewing to the costume. The earliest evidence of gold ornaments belongs to the time about 400 BC, though these are harness mounts, or weapon parts, rather than jewelry in the usual sense. The latter is better represented by the belt hooks (said to have been adopted from the nomads of inner Asia) that were probably worn by both men and women. They were mostly made of bronze, with fine cast ornaments usually of abstracted dragon and bird heads. These belt hooks were inlaid with gold or silver foil, polished fragments of turquoise, or more rarely with jade or glass; sometimes they were gilded.
Toward the end of the Han dynasty, probably not before the later 2nd century AD, the art of granulation was communicated to China from the Hellenized region of the Black Sea coast. Granulation can be traced in China until about the 10th century AD, its discontinuation in the East curiously coinciding with the loss of the technique in the West. Granulation was combined with filigree; and hairpins, combs, earrings, and costume plaques survive in some quantity, particularly from the richly furnished tombs of the T’ang dynasty (AD 618–907). There are plaques with birds and flowers delineated by soldered wire, inlaid with turquoise, on a ground of fine granulation that appears like a dust of gold.
The employment of the repousse technique in gold and silver, particularly on the heads of combs, can be attributed to the T'ang period but became more common in the Sung dynasty (AD 960–1279). Meanwhile, hairpins of filigree, with heads shaped as butterflies or flowers, sometimes with pearls or small jade additions, continued the age-old fashion. A scented hairpin takes the place of the scarf or ring of European romance. They were called pu yao (“shaking while walking”) and were loosely made so as to sway when the wearer moved. Gilded bronze and silver were the principal materials. There are accounts of elaborate headdresses, some no doubt of the kind representing a complete phoenix such as are to be seen on clay tomb statuettes of the T'ang period, but no surviving examples of these can be attributed with certainty to the Sung period. Jade ornaments during this period were still attached to the costume.
Jewelry survives in greater quantity from the Ming dynasty (AD 1368–1644) and gives an impression of greater taste for elaborate figural and floral designs in high repoussé relief and for the effect of semiprecious stones. The latter were prized for their color rather than their luminosity or rarity. They are never elaborately faceted, being merely ground flat and beveled at the edge for the most part and are set nearly always en cabochon, with barely a preliminary polishing, sometimes even retaining the irregularities of the pebble. The stones are invariably semiprecious or even commonplace: amethyst, agate, chalcedony, pink and other quartzes, and, of course, jade. Until modern times, this last has been the most admired of the stones, especially the white variety, which was used for spacers and linking pieces in the silk and beaded hangings of elaborate costumes. The plaques of silver repoussé with flowers and scenes of people were probably used only by men as belt ornaments. Apart from the signet ring, the use of which may not go back beyond Ming times, the male could affect jewelry only in his accoutrement.
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