999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

Beauty in the Flaws

2017-07-03 13:06:34ByMaWeidu
Special Focus 2017年3期

By Ma Weidu

Beauty in the Flaws

By Ma Weidu

Ma Weidu (1955-), a famous Chinese antique collector, best-selling author and popular talk show host, is the founder and curator of Guanfu Museum, the first private antique museum in China.

In the wintertime twenty years ago, I was invited to dinner at the best beef hot-pot restaurant in Beijing. Twenty guests sat around two round tables. Suddenly, a guest stood up and said he had“something for sale.” He showed us an old album entitledTwenty Pictures of Pottery Making. which depicts the process of pottery making and documented the sintering ceramic products in Qing Dynasty.

During Qianlong’s reign, the emperor was fond of pottery making, so he commanded the court painters to draw pictures ofPottery Making,Farming and Weaving,The Cotton Industry, and many others. The replicas of these valuable pictures were stored in the Palace Museum. None of us had ever seen an original one before.

Now it was before our eyes, one of the original albums, colored and drawn by court painters Ding Guanpeng, Sun You, and Zhou Kun. It was told that Emperor Qianlong had been very satisfied with the paintings and ordered Tang Ying, the official porcelain conservator, to look after it carefully. The album now was in a poor condition, full of water stains.

The owner bade a price of 300,000 yuan. I was eager to take it when a friend pulled my sleeve and told me that anything in such poor condition would lose its value.

“One hundred thousand,” I responded, half hesitating.

The owner gave me a blank glance and left without a word.

In the evening, I called the guy again to ask if he would sell it to me for 150,000 yuan. He refused me.

On May the next year, I saw this album again in Christie’s, Hong Kong. The pictures were repaired well with only light marks of waterlogging. Yuanta ETFs, one of best Ming and Qing porcelain collectors in Taiwan, purchased it at a price of 2,200,000 yuan.

In the 1980s, I heard a true story about a Taiwanese man spending ten thousand dollars on a Xu Beihong’s painting, which was in extremely bad condition. He sent it to the famous antique shop Rongbaozhai and asked for a re-mount. The restorer just spread out the painting on a table, and poured boiling water onto it. Gosh! Burning ten thousand dollars would be slower. But finally the painting was restored perfectly, just a little lighter in color.

I have seen even more magical skills in restoring old furniture. In earlier times, when you found a set of valuable old furniture, you could transport it to a restorer by tricycle. The man would first boil two kettles of water, and then put two cubes of alkalis (often used in steaming mantou at the time) beside the kettles. After the alkalis had melted in the heat, the restorer would pour the hot liquid onto the furniture, and cover it for a while. Then with a brush, the man would clean the surface of the furniture, and repair the damages with glue.

When all above procedures were done, the skilled man would say, “Almost there. Now let’s cleanse it.”

The term “cleansing” in furniture repairing business means scraping off a thin layer using a carpenter’s plane. It was that tiny cleansing plane, moving so fast in the repair man’s hands, with wood shavings flying from its edge like scraps of tissue paper.

Now if you visit Guanfu Museum, you can see a big painter’s red sandalwood table. (With the one-meter diameter of its top, the table is the world’s largest.) Many visitors are curious about the brand-new look of the table. I can tell youit’s all about the “cleansing” work.

The concepts of furniture repairing, or antique restoration, are different in China and abroad. Chinese aim to make old things look new. We use the same kind of materials of the original furniture to repair it, that is, huanghuali wood for repairing huanghuali wood furniture, and rosewood for rosewood, red sandalwood for red sandalwood, and so on. A skilled Chinese restorer can make the damaged parts of the furniture “invisible.”

Westerners tend to leave historical marks as they are. They also use different materials in repairing, to the point that you can see clearly where the mending works have been.

So is the difference between Chinese and Japanese porcelain restorations. I have seen the incredible works of some highly skilled restorers in South China nowadays. Even under high-powered magnifying glass you can hardly find the traces of any damage. A friend of mine once showed me a restored Song dynasty porcelain ware, along with its previous photo in which I could see a crack on the edge. Without that photo I would never have known that it had been damaged. In the past, under a high-powered magnifying glass, you could tell the difference, because inside the repaired area there were no bubbles a sintered ceramic product should have inside. But nowadays they can even “create” the bubbles, arrayed in the same way as the original. Isn’t it amazing?

Japanese people do this work differently. They use lacquer and the mixture of water and mine ashes to mend damaged porcelain ware, and then paste gold foil on the repaired place. Yes, pure gold. The technical term of this step is “goldmending.” This gives Japanese antiques and many historical sites a special beauty.

In old times, there was also such a style of restoration in China. It was called “cramping.” The restorers used juzi, a kind of cramping, to mend things such as woks, bowls, and urns. Broken porcelain ware could be cramped with juzi and be put back in use. Some bowls I saw with juzi on them were really beautiful.

In earlier days, wares with juzi were cheap. At that time I bought some colorful bowls mended with juzi; they were awfully beautiful and cost me only several yuan. In early 1980s, some dealers from abroad purposely looked for these antiques in Beijing markets. The price was offered according to the number of juzi. Ten yuan for one juzi; a bowl with twenty would be worth two hundred yuan. A man who sold his bowl with more than one hundred juzi was said to be made rich.

A former praising term to describe wares with many juzi was the phrase “centipede feet.” By unique great skills, lots of the tiny juzi were arranged in order. Those foreign dealers thought that porcelain wares with juzi had “a beauty of flaws.”We Chinese people didn’t understand that beauty until all such wares were bought and gone.

So what was the concept in this old repairing work? It’s to value your household articles, I think, and not to waste. With this in mind, restorers can go anywhere and earn a living.

(FromDu Du (Volume II), New Star Press. Translation: Wang Xiaoke)

主站蜘蛛池模板: 在线视频亚洲色图| 亚洲综合经典在线一区二区| 国产亚洲精久久久久久无码AV | 久久久噜噜噜| 2020极品精品国产 | 国产成人区在线观看视频| 国产无码网站在线观看| 欧美国产菊爆免费观看| 国产一二视频| 欧美a√在线| 国产成人精品男人的天堂下载 | 亚洲视频二| 五月天丁香婷婷综合久久| 欧美人在线一区二区三区| 好久久免费视频高清| 欧美 国产 人人视频| 色综合中文综合网| 亚洲人成网址| 日韩大片免费观看视频播放| 免费jizz在线播放| 久久婷婷五月综合97色| 国产在线精彩视频论坛| 国产高清国内精品福利| 中文字幕在线观| 国产毛片片精品天天看视频| 亚洲欧美不卡| 亚洲成人免费在线| 亚洲免费福利视频| 欧美色视频在线| 国内精品视频| 亚洲人在线| 精品欧美一区二区三区久久久| 99久久亚洲综合精品TS| 伊人久久福利中文字幕| 国产簧片免费在线播放| 欧美日本在线播放| 国产制服丝袜无码视频| 夜夜高潮夜夜爽国产伦精品| 久久精品国产999大香线焦| 天堂成人在线| 久久国产乱子伦视频无卡顿| 99免费在线观看视频| 久久久久88色偷偷| 欧美一级黄色影院| 久久久久88色偷偷| 国产激爽大片高清在线观看| 伊人AV天堂| 久青草网站| 伊人久久大香线蕉aⅴ色| 欧美区国产区| 日韩大片免费观看视频播放| 亚洲黄色高清| 国产精品内射视频| 国产喷水视频| 自拍偷拍欧美| 国产美女免费网站| 在线观看亚洲成人| 青青青视频91在线 | 欧美综合中文字幕久久| 激情六月丁香婷婷| 久久青草免费91观看| 亚洲无码91视频| 久草中文网| jizz亚洲高清在线观看| 国产午夜一级毛片| 国产在线无码一区二区三区| 中文字幕永久在线观看| 色婷婷成人| 国产va在线观看免费| 无码AV动漫| 精品無碼一區在線觀看 | 99伊人精品| 四虎精品黑人视频| 亚洲综合九九| 国产日韩欧美在线视频免费观看| 日韩欧美91| 高清欧美性猛交XXXX黑人猛交| 久久婷婷六月| 欧美特级AAAAAA视频免费观看| 日本一区二区三区精品视频| 日韩成人在线网站| 9啪在线视频|