Writings and paintings on silk (Boshu yu Bohua)
From
sometime in the Warring States Period (475-221 B.C.)
and over a long priod of time in ancient China, plain
silk of various descriptions joined bamboo and wood slips
as the material for writing or painting on. Silk
had advantages over the slips in that it was much lighter
and could be cut in desired shapes and sizes and folded,the better to
be kept and carried. But owing to its much greater cost, silk was never
so popularly used as the slips.
The most valuable find of ancient silk writings was
made in 1973 from an ancient tomb known as the No.
3 Han Tomb at Mawangdui, Changsha, Hunan Province.
It is in the form of 30-odd pieces of silk, bearing more than 120,000
characters. They consist largely of ancient works that had long been
lost. For instance, Wuxingzhan describes the orbits of five planets
(Venus, Jupiter, Mercury, Mars and Saturn) and gives the cycles of their
alignment, all with a precision far more remarkable than similar works
which appeared later. Also found were three maps drawn on silk, showing
the topograpghy, the stationing of troops and the cities and towns of
certain regions of China. They are the earliest maps in China, and in
the world as well, that have been made on the basis of field surveys.
Contrary to their modem counterparts, they show south on top and north
at the bottom.The topographic map is at a scale of 1:180,000, and the
troop distribution map at about 1:80,000/100,000. Their historical value
may be easily imagined when one remembers that they are at least 2,100
years old.
Silk was considered in old China an exquisite
material for writing on; some were pre-marked with lines in
vermilion. During the Tang Dynasty (618-907), it was
the fashion to weave the lines into plain white silk
to be used exclusively for writing.
Many artists of today have carried on the ancient practice
of painting and writing on silk.
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