Publication
Washington, DC : Smithsonian Freer Gallery of Art and Arthur M. Sackler Gallery ; Munich : Hirmer, [2020]
Physical Description
221 pages : illustrations (some color), portraits, facsimiles, map ; 31 cm
Summary
"The gentle sound of the qin zither is familiar from Chinese classical music, and the instrument itself has an extremely long and storied history. This lavishly illustrated volume focuses attention on the seven important qin zithers, which date from the period between the late Middle Ages and modern times, featured in the Freer Gallery of Art and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, the Smithsonian's National Museum of Asian Art. Yang Yuanzheng, one of the leading experts on qin music in the world, traces the history of qin instruments, which are currently understood to originate in the Bronze Age, and describes three eras in the development of the qin zither and its cultural environment. He carefully analyzes the construction of the instruments and questions earlier assumptions about their age and origins. Yang's insight, the cultural significance of the qin, and the unique nature of the instruments in the Freer and Sackler make this volume essential reading for art historians and music archaeologists, as well as lovers of this instrument itself."--Back cover.
Contents
Acquisition : purchases by a gentleman
Archaeology : truths gradually revealed
Withered wood, dragon's roar
The bronze qin : recasting a lost Atlantis
An iron horse and worked wood
No longer an end without a journey.