Ten Thousand Things: Module and Mass Production in Chinese Art

By (author): "Lothar Ledderose"
Publish Date: December 21st 1999
Ten Thousand Things: Module and Mass Production in Chinese Art
ISBN0691009570
ISBN139780691009575
AsinTen Thousand Things: Module and Mass Production in Chinese Art
Original titleTen Thousand Things: Module and Mass Production in Chinese Art.
Chinese workers in the third century b.c. created seven thousand life-sized terracotta soldiers to guard the tomb of the First Emperor. In the eleventh century a.d., Chinese builders constructed a pagoda from as many as thirty thousand separately carved wooden pieces. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, China exported more than a hundred million pieces of porcelain to the West. As these examples show, the Chinese throughout history have produced works of art in astonishing quantities--and have done so without sacrificing quality, affordability, or speed of manufacture. How have they managed this? Lothar Ledderose takes us on a remarkable tour of Chinese art and culture to explain how artists used complex systems of mass production to assemble extraordinary objects from standardized parts or modules. As he reveals, these systems have deep roots in Chinese thought--in the idea that the universe consists of ten thousand categories of things, for example--and reflect characteristically Chinese modes of social organization. Ledderose begins with the modular system par excellence: