Sunday 27 May 2012

HDB Void Decks

. . . a place for joy, and a place for sorrow.

A void deck is typically found under apartment blocks in Singapore. The void deck occupies the ground level, while apartments are usually on the second floor onwards. Void decks are a space for community mingling and functions are often attended by neighbours across the ethnic spectrum. Sometimes, events like Malay weddings, Chinese weddings or funeral wakes are held in such places.

Most void decks also have bicycle racks, benches, and recreational tables for residents’ use. It is common for void deck tables to have either a xiangqi or checkers board carved on them. 

Void decks also facilitate the travelling through the apartment buildings on the ground level, rather than travelling around them.


Wednesday 2 May 2012

The Tang Shipwreck: Gold and Ceramics from 9th-century China

In 1998, a shipwreck was discovered in shallow water near Belitung Island in the Java Sea. Careful study revealed this to be a 9th-century Arab merchant ship heavily laden with Chinese ceramics, gold, silver, and other precious objects from Tang dynasty China. 

It soon became apparent that this ship, the oldest Arab vessel discovered in Asian waters, was no ordinary find. It was sailing from China back to the Middle East, where its journey had begun, and it provides direct evidence of the maritime trade between China, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East over a thousand years ago. It was carrying some 60,000 objects, including both mass-produced and rare ceramics, exquisite gold and silver objects, and everyday items belonging to the crew.

Here are some of the artifacts:


A bone die and inch-high ivory "acorns"—game pieces, perhaps—hint at amusements that helped pass idle hours for passengers and crew on the heavily laden vessel. The voyage ended as a total loss, but its remains enrich our vision of China's long trading history.

Plates



Hu Ewer with dragon head

Ewer with feline-shaped handle

Stem cup with drinking tube



This mirror is the only surviving example of a celebrate form called "Jiangxin" or "Yangxin" (Heart of Yangzi), which was previously recorded in texts. It was supposedly cast abroad a boat moored in the Yangzi River at Yangzhou.

The Eight Trigrams on the mirror are associated with yin and yang, and repreent the continual process of change in the universe. The four mythical creatures signify the cardinal directions.

Inscription: "made on the 29th day of the 11th month of the 1st year of the wuxu era of the Qianyuan reign of the Tang in Yangzhou in the midst of the Yangzi River [from bronze] smelted one hundred times"


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