“Very old Chinese bells, a large number of which were melted down”

M. Herren
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Abstract

In the second half of the 19th century, Buddhist bells from Japan began to arrive in Switzerland. The fact that these were objects listed in the so-called ethnographic collections is not surprising and the history of collecting has been a subject of postcolonial research. However, remarkably, the travel route of these bells, some of which weighed over a ton, could not be documented. Until now, the way how the bells were imported into Switzerland  as unknown, and the problem of their provenance unsolved. This article argues that a global history approach provides new insights in two respects: The consideration of materiality allows a new  nderstanding of the objects, while the activities of local collectors, seen from a micro-global point of view, reveal the local imprints of the global. Within this rationale, a history of individual bells in the possession of individual art lovers and museums translates into a history of scrap metal trade, allows to consider the disposal of disliked objects at their place of origin, and opens up a global framing of local history. Using global history as a concept, the historicity of the global gains visibility as we look at the intersection of materiality and the local involvement of global networks. Ultimately, as we follow the journey of the bells, reinterpreting scrap metal into art has formed a striking way in which local history assimilates the global.
“非常古老的中国钟,很多都被熔化了。”
19世纪下半叶,来自日本的佛钟开始传入瑞士。事实上,这些物品被列入所谓的民族志收藏并不奇怪,收藏的历史一直是后殖民研究的主题。然而,值得注意的是,这些钟的运输路线,其中一些重达一吨多,却无法被记录下来。到目前为止,这些钟是如何进口到瑞士的尚不清楚,它们的来源问题也没有得到解决。本文认为,全球历史方法在两个方面提供了新的见解:对物质性的考虑使人们对物品有了新的理解,而从微观全球的角度来看,当地收藏家的活动揭示了全球的地方印记。在此基础上,个别艺术爱好者和博物馆拥有的单个钟的历史转化为废金属贸易的历史,允许考虑在其原产地处理不受欢迎的物体,并开辟了当地历史的全球框架。使用全球历史作为一个概念,当我们看到物质性和全球网络的地方参与的交叉点时,全球的历史性获得了可见性。最终,当我们跟随钟声的旅程时,将废金属重新诠释为艺术,形成了一种引人注目的方式,在这种方式中,当地历史同化了全球历史。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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