Laminating gold by hand in Hanoi’s old village
1/10 tael of gold can be laminated into a sheet of 1m2. The
sheet is then cut into small square pieces of 1cm long to inlay on
worshipping items.
Visiting historical relics and temples,
visitors often see the gilded Buddha statues, horizontal lacquered
boards and parallel sentences. Over a long period of time, these
worshipping items are still beautiful. Most of them were made by
talented hands of artisans in Kieu Ky village, Gia Lam district, Hanoi.
Over
500 years ago, Nguyen Quy Tri who lived during the Anterior Le Dynasty
(1428- 1527) passed the craft down to Kieu Ky locals. Descendants of
those locals now take his date of death, the 17th day of the eighth
lunar month, as the annual chance to show their gratitude to the
ancestor of the craft.
Craftsmen often start their work in the
new year on the 14th day of the first lunar month with a ceremony,
during which a famous and skilled man, often ready to help villagers, is
given the honor of making the first hammer strikes.
Kieu Ky is
the only village in Vietnam where the sheets are made from pure gold and
silver, called old sheets, used exclusive for products in the village.
Craftsmen only make decorative sheets from tin, called new sheets,
outside the village where they go to practice the craft. Each household
puts its own distinguishing characteristics on the products. That is
why craftsmen can easily pinpoint who the manufacturers of the works are
among their fellow villagers.
Coming to Kieu Ky, visitors find
themselves in the busy life of the locals. Most of the villagers are
peasants, but they hardly have any free time because, over 50 households
engaged in the craft employ hundreds of the old and young alike.
Vu
Thi Dac, 75, who has spent over 60 years in the craft, said : “this job
requires experience, technique and sophisticated work before becoming a
sheet.” First, pine resin is mixed with gelatin glue processed from
buffalo skin. The mixture is then mixed with special raw paper pulp,
then cut cut into 4cm x 6cm pieces. Small pieces of gold, sandwiched
between those sheet, are hammered for nearly an hour before becoming a
complete products.
The last stage of the work is to take the gold
sheets out of the “moulds”, but this is by no means a simple task, as
only a gentle breath would be enough to blow them away.
In recent
years, together with the growth of the economy, various pagodas, and
shrines are being restored, creating a chance for the development of
the craft in Kieu Ky, as the demand for the sheets skyrockets.
Large
volumes of the sheets are exported to Japan and Thailand, and this
injects a new vitality to the craft. Kieu Ky craftsmen can feel proud
because they have successfully restored and developed the unique legacy
passed down to them by their ancestors.
Zing/Cinet
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Thứ Tư, 30 tháng 4, 2014
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