Artwork Page for A Pair of Chopsticks

Details / Information for A Pair of Chopsticks

A Pair of Chopsticks

청동 젓가락 [靑銅箸]

918–1392
Medium
bronze
Measurements
Overall: 24.3 cm (9 9/16 in.)
Credit Line
Public Domain
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Location
Not on view
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Did You Know?

In contrast to the Chinese and Japanese, Koreans still prefer metal chopsticks (stainless steel and brass) to wooden ones.

Description

In Korea, chopsticks made of metal such as brass, silver, and gold were excavated from ancient tombs and ruins dated to the 6th century at the earliest. Burial goods often include utilitarian objects such as table wares and utensils because the dead were believed to need them in the afterlife.
A pair of bronze chopsticks consists of two long, slender rods that taper to points at the bottom. The dark gray metal features a greenish patina throughout. Near the blunt top end, several thin horizontal grooves encircle the surface of each rod. Both rods extend diagonally from the upper right toward the lower left, their smooth, straight forms highlighting the weathered texture of the metal.

A Pair of Chopsticks

918–1392

Korea, Goryeo dynasty (918–1392)

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