
Embroidery, a folk art with a long tradition, occupies
an important position in the history of Chinese arts
and crafts. It is, in its long development, inseparable
from silkworm-raising and silk-reeling and weaving.
China
is the first country in the world that discovered the
use of silk. Silkworms were domesticated as early as
5000 years ago. The production of silk thread and fabrics
gave rise to the art of embroidery. According to the
classical Shangshu(or Book of History), the "regulations
on costumes" of 4000 years ago stipulated among
other things "dresses and skirts with designs and
embroideries". This is evidence that embroidery
had become an established art by that remote time.
In 1958 a piece of silk was found in a tomb of the
state of Chu of the Warring Sates Period (475-221B.C).
It is embroidered with a dragon-and-phoenix design.
More than 2000 years old, it is the earliest piece of
Chinese embroidery ever unearthed.
The
art became widespread during the Han Dynasty (206 B.C.-220
A.D.); many embroidered finds date back to that period.
Today, silk embroidery is practised nearly all over
China. The best commercial products, it is generally
agreed, come from four provinces: Jiangsu (notably Suzhou),
Hunan, Sichuan and Guangdong, each with its distinctive
features.
Embroidered works have become highly complex and exquisite
today. Take the double-face embroidered "Cat",
representative work of Suzhou embroidery, for example,
the artist splits the hair-thin coloured silk thread
into filaments-half, quarter 1/12 or even 1/48 of its
original
thickness-- and uses these in embroidering concealing
in the process the thousands of ends and joints and
making them disappear as if by magic. The finished work
is a cute and mischievous-looking cat on both sides
of the groundwork. The most difficult part of the job
is the eyes of the cat. To give them lustre and life,
silk filaments of more than 20 colours or shades have
to be used.
Recently, on the basis of two-face embroidery have
developed further innovations-- the same design on both
sides in different colours, and totally different patterns
on the two faces of the same groundwork. It seems that
possibilities hitherto unknown to the art may yet be
explored.

|