Part 1.Art Features
Original art rooting at the Huangtu Plateau
    Part 2.Exhibits
A history of Fengxiang Clay Sculpture in China Shanxi
    Part 3.China Culture
The Extensive and Profound Chinese Civilization
    Part 4.About NikerChina
Devoting To The Renaissance Of Traditional Chinese Culture
 
 
       
 
   
Buddha Statues from Storage Pit at Longxing Temple
 
   

Buddha statues found from a storage pit, mainly dating back to the Northern Wei Dynasty (386-534), Eastern Wei Dynasty (534-550) and Northern Qi Dynasty (550-577)
Location: Qingzhou, Shandong Province
Period: 529-1026
Excavated in 1996
Significance: These statues are significant materials to the study of the history of Buddhist art in China.

Introduction

Longxing Temple is a famous Buddhist temple with a history of about 1,000 years. One of the reasons why the Longxing Temple is so important is that it provides a historical continuum of the Buddhist plastic arts in China from the Northern Wei through to the end of the Northern Qi, and thus a chance to document stylistic changes influenced by shifting alliances between north and south during this turbulent period.

Buddha Statues from Storage Pit at Longxing Temple
Colored statue of standing Buddha in stone: (left, the remnant height is 121.5 cm); Colored statue of standing Bodhisattva in stone: (right, height 95 cm)

The storage pit is located in the northmost of the temple, with a length of 8.7 meters from south to north and a width of 6.8 meters from east to west. In the pit there are more than 400 Buddha statues in various types and carving skills, of which the biggest is 320 centimeters high while the smallest only 20 centimeters high.

The Buddha statues, which include Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, and arhats, as well as a large number of elliptical figural stelae, offers an interesting contrast in styles. The earlier Northern Wei Buddhas generally wear a loose outer robe that covers both shoulders and an undergarment tied at the neck, a combination known in Chinese as Baoyibodai, and representing a Sinicisation of the traditional Indian Buddha robes. By the Northern Qi period, the flimsier robes covered only the left shoulder and were closely moulded to the soft contours of the body, a style that can be seen both in early Indian Buddhist sculpture and that of Buddhist regions of Southeast Asia, such as Cambodia.

The discovery and excavation of the storage pit at Longxing Temple is by far the largest and most significant group of Buddha statues.

 
   
  China Energy >  

Art Q&A

 
  China Modern  
  China Crafts  
  China Archeology  
  China Acrobatics  
  China Calligraphy  
  China Literature  
  China Architecture  
  China Painting  
  China Music  
  China Dance  
  China Opera  
  China Quyi  
  China Drama  
  China Film  
     
 
       
 

©2005-2007 NikerChina .Copyright All rights reserved.

To nikerchina English Web index