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Image Not Available for Rubbing
Rubbing
Image Not Available for Rubbing

Rubbing

Dateca. 1920s
Label TextThe inscriptions on the Wu family shrines were studied by the 11th-century antiquarians who-despite never having personally set foot at the site-collected ink rubbings on paper. Qing dynasty (1644-1911) scholar and artist Huang Yi chanced upon the half-buried and scattered slabs while passing through Jiaxiang County, Shangdong in the 1780s, ordered their excavation and erected a preservation hall to both protect and display them. Chinese, Japanese and Western scholars of the 20th century reconstructed the original configuration of the slabs, informing the arrangement by which they are here displayed at the Seattle Art Museum. The viewer is encouraged to imagine each set of rubbings in its original form as a three-walled shrine with gables and a roof.
Object number91.255.1.14
Credit LineGift of James K. Penfield
Dimensions50 x 57 3/4in. (127 x 146.7cm)
MediumInk rubbing on paper
Rubbing of stone relief from Li-hsi's tomb
Chinese
ca. 1935
Object number: 74.8
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.1.2
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.1.3
Photo: Elizabeth Mann
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.1.5
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.1.6
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.1.7
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.1.8
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.2.1
Chinese
ca. 1930s
Object number: 91.255.2.2