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The art of micro
carving refers generally to the engraving of
infinitesimal characters on ivory or human hair.
The artist engaged in this unique craft, when he
applies the graver, cannot see the work he is
doing but has to rely on feel. The art is
therefore sometimes described as ¡°carving by
one¡¯s will¡± |
There are in many cities of China such micro sculptors,
who can engrave on small grains of ivory poems,
paintings and miniature seal marks in no less than 10
different colors.
Zhang Yunhu, a micro-calligrapher of Shanghai, on a
piece of ivory 3 cm square, reproduced the whole
anthology of the Three Hundred Tang Poems, totaling more
than 10,000 characters. To the naked eye, the words are
just rows upon rows of black needlepoint etchings.
In 1982 he came out with another marvel -the complete
text in 14,000 characters of the Constitution to the
Chinese Communist Party on a chip of ivory 2.8 cm
square. This he did only in two weeks. Viewed under a
microscope with a magnification of 100, the characters
can be seen to be composed of elegant clear and fine
strokes.
¡¡
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Micro carving on human hair is a new art developed only
in recent years, being pioneered by Shen Weizhong, a
member of Suzhou Arts and Crafts Research Institute. On
a hair several mm long and without the help of any
magnifying apparatus, the artist can engrave poems or
other texts by relying upon the feel of his fingers. To
achieve this, he needs an absolutely quiet environment,
in which, holding his breath and controlling his pulse
by meditative power, he plies his art with a cutting
wire thinner than the hair. To read the surprisingly
neat characters on the finished work, it is necessary to
magnify them several dozen times with a microscope. |
Hair carving has been developed on the basis of
fine-character carving, which has always been a Chinese
tradition. Its rudiments may be traced back to more than
2,000 years ago. On the fragments of oracle bones of the
Western Zhou Period, unearthed in Guyuan, Shaanxi
province, have been found small carved characters the
size of rice grains with hair-thin strokes.
Archaeologists have also found on the much earlier Yin
oracle shells miniature engravings the size of millet,
legible only under 5-fold magnification.
Artists of today with their assiduous study and
experiment have given the age-old art a new luster. |