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中国非物质文化遗产
基因数据库

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TRADITIONOW

中国非物质文化遗产基因数据库(简称非遗基因库)是一个基于中国非物质文化遗产大数据的知识共享平台。该数据库搜集、整合了海量中国非物质文化遗产的多媒体资料,搭建了基于专业术语及其知识网络的非遗知识图谱,从工艺、色彩和纹案三个维度对非遗知识进行了深入拆解、再现和重组,打造了包括非遗多媒体资源库、非遗知识库和非遗创新转化案例库在内的一站式服务平台,旨在深入挖掘非遗蕴含的传统文化基因及其演化路径,探索中国非遗在大数据及人工智能时代的创承新模式,助力中国非物质文化遗产的数字化保存与创造性再生。

非遗知识图谱

点击解锁云锦知识关联网络

设计探索

点击体验色彩分析、一键线稿与矢量图生成

图纹识别

点击定位图纹基因
图中的动物是十二生肖中的一种,它对应十二地支中的哪一个?换一题ABCD
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配色筛选

Vase with Elephant Heads and Cloud Designs

如意
Period:Qing dynasty (1644–1911), Qianlong period (1736–95)
Culture:China
Medium:Soft-paste porcelain with incised and applied decoration (Jingdezhen ware)
Dimensions:H. 10 in. (25.4 cm); Diam. 6 in. (15.2 cm)
Classification:Ceramics
Credit Line:H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929
Accession Number:29.100.279
In the eighteenth century, the kilns at Jingdezhen began to make porcelains of a different material. Known as huashi, or "slippery stone, " this expensive material, often called soft paste, was used to make thin vessels that frequently were decorated with incised or raised designs under glaze. While the reasons for its introduction remain unclear, it is worth noting that soft paste is easily carvable, and its use would have thus been akin to contemporaneous interests in the manipulation of other materials such as ivory and bamboo. The shape of this vase is loosely based on Bronze Age vessels whose handles were shaped like the heads of animals.

色彩分析

41 %
26 %
22 %
7 %

主要色彩
LAB
RGB
HSB
333333 (40.93%)
L 21.25
A 0
B 0
R 51
G 51
B 51
H
S 0%
B 20%
666666 (25.95%)
L 43.19
A 0
B 0
R 102
G 102
B 102
H
S 0%
B 40%
999999 (22.03%)
L 63.22
A 0
B 0
R 153
G 153
B 153
H
S 0%
B 60%
CCCCCC (7.45%)
L 82.05
A 0
B 0
R 204
G 204
B 204
H
S 0%
B 80%
FFFFFF (2.33%)
L 100
A 0
B 0
R 255
G 255
B 255
H
S 0%
B 100%

设计说明

Period:Qing dynasty (1644–1911), Qianlong period (1736–95)
Culture:China
Medium:Soft-paste porcelain with incised and applied decoration (Jingdezhen ware)
Dimensions:H. 10 in. (25.4 cm); Diam. 6 in. (15.2 cm)
Classification:Ceramics
Credit Line:H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929
Accession Number:29.100.279
In the eighteenth century, the kilns at Jingdezhen began to make porcelains of a different material. Known as huashi, or "slippery stone, " this expensive material, often called soft paste, was used to make thin vessels that frequently were decorated with incised or raised designs under glaze. While the reasons for its introduction remain unclear, it is worth noting that soft paste is easily carvable, and its use would have thus been akin to contemporaneous interests in the manipulation of other materials such as ivory and bamboo. The shape of this vase is loosely based on Bronze Age vessels whose handles were shaped like the heads of animals.