During the late Sui Dynasty
(581-618), the feudal state was torn apart by rival principalities and fell into
a chaos of wars. Li Shiming, who later became the first emperor of the Tang
Dynasty (618-907), and his father, then a local official, initiated an
insurgence, overthrew the Sui Dynasty and unified China in seven years. To stabilize his
hard-earned status, Emperor Li Shiming fought in many early wars to protect his
empire, which is why he had a special affinity for warhorses. It is said that
during the wars Li had a total of six warhorses. In 636, when the construction
of the Zhao Tomb for the emperor began, Li ordered the great artists of the
period -- Yan Lide and Yan Liben -- to paint and engrave the statues of his
warhorses. The huge, engraved stone was later placed at the altar on the north
of the tomb.
The war horses -- Quanmaogua, Saluzi,
Shifachi, Qingzhui, Telebiao and Baitima -- each had its own story to
tell. The sculpture expressed their postures and manner of running. Among them,
Saluzi and Quanmaogua are best preserved. Saluzi is depicted standing with the
senior general Qiu Xinggong in front. During the attack on the capital
Luoyang, when Saluzi was shot,
the general came to his rescue immediately. The sculpture reenacts the scene of
Qiu pulling out an arrow from Saluzi's body. With his forelegs erect, the horse
is portrayed leaning backward and the muscles in his long neck are strained due
to his nervousness and pain. The relationship between master and his horse is
well-captured in Qiu's affection and Saluzi's efforts to cooperate. Although
there have been many magnificent memorial sculptures unearthed in emperors'
mausoleums, the high artistic level of the Sculpture of Six
Warhorses in the Zhao Tomb is rarely seen.
With the war as its subject, the
sculpture is of a novel composition with simple techniques, elaborate craftwork
and smooth lines that fluidly turn into curved lines. The images and characters
of the warhorses are magnificently expressed. In the entire history of Chinese
sculpture, the Sculpture of Six Warhorses in the Zhao Tomb is the most
outstanding work depicting the warhorse. Unfortunately, among the six stone
horses, two were stolen and have ended up at the Museum of Pennsylvania University in the United States. The other four are
now kept at the Stele Forest Museum in Xi'an, Shaanxi
Province.