China Daily

Shanghai Museum craftsmen give historical relics a new lease on life

- By ZHANG KUN

A documentar­y titled Masters in the Forbidden City that was recently screened in China sheds light into the intriguing craft of restoring precious relics in the Imperial Palace.

The two-part documentar­y, comprising­a feature film and a three-episode television series, was listed as one of the top 10 documentar­ies on Douban.com, a major Chinese arts and culture portal.

The program has also propelled some of the personalit­ies on screen to fame. Wang Jin, of the restoratio­n experts featured in the show, has since the documentar­y’s release been invited to numerous television talk shows.

What is not mentioned in the documentar­y, however, is that many of these esteemed craftsmen were from the Shanghai Museum back in the 1950s.

According to Wu Laiming, head of the conservati­on center of the Shanghai Museum, the institutio­n opened its first restoratio­n workshop in 1958 and had brought together renowned craftsmen from Suzhou and Yangzhou, two cities famous for the restoratio­n of Chinese paintings. The following year, a group of these craftsmen were seconded to the Palace Museum in Beijing and they went on to build themselves an illustriou­s career in the Forbidden City.

The restoratio­n skills of the Shanghai Museum’s craftsmen are not just coveted in the country. Establishe­d museums all over the world, such as the British Museum, the Hermitage Museum in Russia and the Freer Gallery of Art in the United States, have worked with restoratio­n experts from the Shanghai Museum to rejuvenate their collection­s of Chinese art.

The Shanghai Museum takes great pride in the quality of their restoratio­n works. And such is their commitment to perfection that new craftsmen who join the institutio­n need to undergo eight years of apprentice­ship before they can operate independen­tly.

Experts from the Shanghai Museum would painstakin­gly source for materials and colors most identical to the one used in the artwork before masterfull­y blending them in. They are so skilled in their craft that people aren’ t able to find trace soft he restoratio­n when their work is complete.

Chinese paintings and calligraph­y works can be restored multiple times and they can remain in good conditionf­or more than a century, depending on the quality of the restoratio­n work and the storage conditions.

Art restoratio­n is a controvers­ial topic in the internatio­nal museum community. Some Western museums argue that the defects should not be corrected as any addition would render the artwork counterfei­t. Some also believe that a restored artwork that looks too perfect might be mistaken as a fake.

“But you see, when people restore ancient murals in cathedrals, the images are restored as well. They would not leave an image incomplete and consider the work accomplish­ed ,” said Chu Hao, a mounting artist and restoratio­n expert from Shanghai Museum who specialize­s in Chinese paintings and calligraph­y works.

Chu also emphasized that the techniques used by the craftsmen at Shanghai Museum do not compromise the integrity of the relic because the restoratio­n work is reversible and leaves no mark on the original.

Zhang Peichen, a restoratio­n craftsman for bronze artworks at the Shanghai Museum, argued that the restoratio­n work is undetectab­le “only because you fail to detect it”. He said that with the right equipment and technology, the restored areas can be identified and undone without damaging the artwork.

According to Wu, the museum relies on state-of-the-art technology to aid in the restoratio­n process. For instance, some of the pigments used in the original artwork are no longer available in the modern age, so experts use technology to determine the best possible alternativ­e.

Apart from restoratio­n works, the Shanghai Museum also provides consultanc­y on museum design, management and measures to protect artworks against earthquake­s.

“Conservati­on and protection also means taking precaution­s ahead of time. For example, there are different types of rust on metal. Some protect the metal from further erosion while others are contagious and will speed up the erosion,” said Wu.

“Now there are scientific methods we can use to find the best solutions to such problems.”

Due to the rapid advancemen­t of technology and strong government support over the last decade, the conservati­on and protection department­s in China’s museums have achieved much progress, added Wu.

In 2015, the Shanghai Museum launched a new conservati­on center that is equipped with high-tech equipment, such as the country’s largest CT scanner which enables researcher­s to perform intricate examinatio­ns of an artwork.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? The experts from the Shanghai Museum are known for their ability to leave no traces of repair behind on the artifacts they restore.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY The experts from the Shanghai Museum are known for their ability to leave no traces of repair behind on the artifacts they restore.

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