
Artist: unknown
Title: The Fei-yi ("Flying Banner"), top section, detail of
the central section
Material: pigment on silk
Site: from the tomb of the Marquise of Dai, at Mawangdui, Changsha,
Hunan.
Current Location:
Period/Date: ca. 180 B.C.E.
Iconography/Iconology: In the center of the painting is a representation
of Marquise of Dai with members of her entourage and possibly her family
paying respects to her. The group is depicted on a what is presumably a
jade platform being carried aloft by the two dragons. The platform rises
towards the jade gates of heaven depicted above.
Stylistic Comments: This is one of the earliest know examples of portraiture
in Chinese painting. The central figure is a representation of the Marquise
of Dai who is shown standing with the support of a cane. The identification
of this figure is supported by the results of a medical examination of the
exhumed body of the Marquise, which indicated that she suffered from physical
conditions that would have required her to use a cane. In addition, among
the fabrics found in the tomb is apparently the actual robe represented
as being worn by the Marquise in the painting. Pictorially, there is an
apparent rescession of space or depth developed through the technique of
overlapping figures. This is especially apparent in the attendants behind
the Marquise.
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