One of
my recent posts was about Penjing Garden at the Shanghai Botanic Gardens. Guess
what..? There also was a Penjing Museum! Actually, it wasn’t that exciting. It
looked a bit rundown and the majority of information was just in Chinese. Explanation
plates with English translations were somewhat ambiguous. Below are some photos
of the museum displays aimed to give Chinese penjing a legitimate claim of
being the first and the oldest.
The
following is the legend for the images above as much as I could understand it.
A - Drawing
of a ceramic shard excavated in Hemudu village, Zhejiang Province. Hemudu
culture is dated from 5200 BC to 4500 BC. It seems that some researchers
believe that it depicts a plat grown in a container.
B - Picture
of a potted plant painted on a corridor wall. The building dates back to Eastern
Han Dynasty (25–220 AD) and it was excavated in Wangdu Hebei Province. The
painting is featuring a plant in a container with a stand.
C - Fresco
of a person holding landscape penjing. It was discovered on the wall of a tomb
build for the Tang Dynasty prince Zhang Huai (653–684 AD). It was excavated in
the Qianling Mausoleum, Shanxi province.
D - Ink
stone fashioned as a rock penjing. Tri-coloured glaze pottery of the Tang
Dynasty excavated in Zhongbao village, Shaanxi Province (907-960 AD).
E - There
was no English translation for this one, but it is a sculpture of a female
holding rock penjing. It dates back to Southern Song Dynasty (1174-1252 AD).
A part
of the museum wasn’t open to public, but I realised that only after entering
it. It wasn’t locked and there were no “no entry” sign. The rooms were poorly
lit and the exhibits were behind dirty glass, hence the photographs are not
that good, but still worth sharing with those who are interested in this sort
of thing. Below are images of some unglazed containers, probably Yuxing ware. The
ones that look older could be Ming Dynasty (1368–1644).
Some of
the glazed containers are shown below.
There
was also a variety of bonsai tables and stands (images below). One of them was
ceramic (bottom image on the right) and it looks quite different from the
ceramic stands I saw in Singapore (see http://lomov.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/vintage-and-antique-bonsai-pots-in.html).
Thanks great posst
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