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Art of Asia
Course: Art of Asia > Unit 2
Lesson 10: Tang dynasty (618–907)- Tang dynasty (618–907), an introduction
- An Introduction to the Tang dynasty (618–906)
- A Tang silk brocade
- Tang Yue ware
- Tomb figurines, Tang dynasty
- Tomb figures of a man and woman on horseback
- Tomb figure of a groom
- Stele of the Buddha Maitreya
- Dancer
- Camel
- Central Asian wine peddler
- Chinese Buddhist cave shrines
- Mogao caves at Dunhuang
- Jataka tales at Dunhuang
- Dunhuang Historical Art, Cave 323
- A silk painting of sacred Buddhist images from Dunhuang
- The paintings and manuscripts from cave 17 at Mogao (1 of 2)
- The paintings and manuscripts from cave 17 at Mogao (2 of 2)
- Hong Bian, the monk in the Library Cave, Mogao
- Zhou Fang, Ladies Wearing Flowers in Their Hair
- Taoism in the Tang and Song dynasties
- Admonitions Scroll, attributed to Gu Kaizhi
- Han Gan, Night-Shining White
- Zither (qin) inscribed with the name “Dragon’s Moan”
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Tomb figurines, Tang dynasty
Polychrome figures (sancai), 618–907 C.E. (Tang dynasty), white clay, lead oxide flux and glazes colored with copper, iron, manganese, and cobalt; fired at 800 degrees Celsius (Shanghai Museum)
A conversation between Dr. Kristen Loring Brennan and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
A conversation between Dr. Kristen Loring Brennan and Dr. Beth Harris. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(jazz piano music) - [Kristen] We are in the Shanghai Museum looking at a group of figurines
from the Tang dynasty. - [Beth] And the figures we're looking at in this particular case
are all female figures. - [Kristen] Some of them are standing. Some of them are sitting. Some of them are holding
birds on their hand. - [Beth] And it's not
just figures that we see during this time, but we
also see horses and camels and even female figures riding horses. These figures seem so lifelike that we almost get a sense
of what life was like in Tang Dynasty, China. - [Kristen] In particular,
at the capital of Chang'an. Tang Dynasty Chang'an benefited greatly from the Silk Road connections. So the Silk Route went
right through there. When we say Silk Route, we
don't mean just one road. We mean a network of trade that spanned all the way
to the Mediterranean. - [Beth] Often we think about China as a very separate place from Europe, from the Mediterranean, when in fact there were
numerous trade routes, bringing goods back and forth between what we today call
the East and the West. - [Kristen] It wasn't
just silk going one way, leaving China going to the Mediterranean, but it was also all of the
points along the Silk Road bringing things in, in particular from Central Asia, musical troops on camels
would be bringing in these Central Asian
melodies that contributed to the development of court melodies at the capital in Chang'an. - [Beth] And so what we can see is a life at court in Chang'an
that wanted luxury goods, not things that could be
produced locally only, but things that could be brought that were exotic from far away. So, we're talking about a
China during the Tang Dynasty that is much more cosmopolitan. - [Kristen] Meaning all different kinds of leisure activities, fashions. When we look at these
figurines in their dress we see a variety of different colors and suggestion that they might have been wearing textile patterns, textiles that perhaps
benefited from motifs that had come from very far. Hairstyles that are sculpted
into array of different butterfly shaped formations,
moons, and big wisps. - [Beth] And one of the figures
dressed very differently, perhaps indicating that
they're not Chinese, but from Central Asia. - [Kristen] You can see the boots, the shorter robe, the shorter sleeves. If this was a court dancer
at the capital of Chang'an, we would see long sleeves so that she could dance
and show her movement, but here, this appears to be somebody in Central Asian dress. The pose even actually
is very interesting. She's got a parrot on her hand. She also has a very elaborate hairstyle, but seems to be so expressive. - [Beth] All of these figures
have fabulous hairstyle, so there's a sense of
a concern for fashion. - [Kristen] Even the sculptor is really trying to capture what
their bodies even look like. - [Beth] Each these figures, even the ones that are
simply standing or sitting, feel alive, they have a sense of
animation in their bodies. They tilt their head slightly. They move their hips slightly. There's a sense of liveliness, which in some ways, feels like a contrast to the
idea of where we found them. These were mostly found in tombs, although just because
we found them in tombs doesn't mean that they weren't also found in the court itself, but they survived because
they were found in tombs, but they're in tombs because
people wanted to bring with them into the afterlife all the pleasures that they
enjoyed in their life at court. - [Kristen] When they sculpted
these kinds of objects, they're white clay, then glazed on top, they portrayed these idealized body types. We have one figurine
here who is quite plump, very voluptuous and she's
draped in so much fabric. You can see the folds of her gown. She's wearing layers and layers of silk. Those plumped cheeks was something that we see throughout sculpture, not just of women, but also in Buddhist
sculpture at the time. Buddhism was flourishing with
the patronage of the court. - [Beth] There were Buddhist temples all along the Silk Route
where traders would stop. The full-figured woman with
her arms tucked in her sleeves, one gets the sense, not only that that's
the ideal beauty form, but the ideal way of walking, her gracefulness at court, and this brown and green is
a particular kind of glazing that's typical of the Tang Dynasty. - [Kristen] This is the three
color glaze, the Sancai, and that three color
glaze is mineral pigments. We have copper, iron, manganese. Sometimes you'll also see cobalt. We have some touches of
it on the figurines here, but typically the three
colors being that ivory white, that amber orange-ish red,
and then this vibrant green. - [Beth] And in the glaze
we frequently see dripping, a sense almost of watercolor. - [Kristen] When they
started to fire these glazes, they have quite a bit of lead content. When fired they would drip, so what would result are
these splashy looking drips. And you'd see the colors
pooling together at times. - [Beth] We're really getting insight into courtly life at Chang'an
during the Tang Dynasty here. (jazzy piano music)