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Palace Museum porcelain broken

 

Palace Museum admits damage to ancient plate

Managers of the Palace Museum admitted on July 31 that a piece of 1,000-year-old porcelain among its invaluable collection had been damaged by error during research, which involved examining the artifact with an analytical device.

This disclosure came after a netizen on July 30 blew the whistle on the accident and claimed the Palace Museum, also known as the Forbidden City, had been trying to cover up the incident.

 

The porcelain plate, a grade-one cultural relic from the Ge kiln called "Celadon Plate with a Mouth in the Shape of Mallow Petals", was crushed and damaged on July 4 when a laboratory researcher used a device to examine it, according to a statement from the museum.

The researcher stopped the operation immediately and reported the accident to the museum, the statement said.

The museum did not reveal how badly the plate was damaged.

The researcher had made a mistake in operating the device, causing a platform holding the plate to rise excessively, the statement said, citing an investigation draft report filed on July 21.

The design means the device will not inflict any damage on the object under examination if used properly, the statement said. Since last year, more than 50 ancient ceramic items had been examined during research without damage.

On the night July 30, a male netizen, posting under the name "Longcan", revealed the accident on his micro blog without identifying sources. He also alleged the museum had been trying to silence people who knew about the damage.

However, the blogger said the issue was resolved now that the museum had publicly confirmed the damage.

The museum will report the accident to the Ministry of Culture and the State Administration of Cultural Heritage as soon as the report is completed, according to the museum's statement.

According to the law on the protection of cultural relics, museums should report any damage to grade-one antiquities in their collections to senior top culture authorities. But the law does not specify how soon the matter should be referred to the authorities.

The porcelain plate, and nine other pieces collected by the Palace Museum, are products from the Ge kiln, which was one of the five most famous kilns in the Song Dynasty (960-1279). The pieces produced in these kilns are the most coveted for collectors of Chinese ceramics. In 1992, a porcelain plate dated to the Song Dynasty fetched $1.54 million at an auction in New York.

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