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Shell Mosaics
The major shell mosaic production centers in China
include Dalian city of Liaoning Province, Qingdao city of Shandong Province, Qinhuangdao city of Hebei Province, Beihai city of the
Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, and so on.
 Shell mosaics of Qingdao
Shell mosaics in Qingdao, East China's Shandong Province, were developed to
explore and preserve Chinese time-honored traditional arts.
Records indicate that people learned to inlay various kinds of decorative
articles from shells on different objects, creating the earliest trumpet shell
inlaying technique, as early as the Western Zhou Dynasty (1100-771BC). In the
early 1960s, Qingdao developed shell mosaics on the basis of this kind of
inlaying technique and set up the Qingdao Shell Mosaic Plant, continuously
improving the craft.
Among the various shell mosaics of Qingdao, the painted screen "Princess
Wencheng Entering Tibet" is the most famous. There are 84 painted human figures
on this 3-meter-long and more than 2-meter-wide screen, including civil and
military emissaries and the honor guard from the Tang (618-907) empire sending
off the princess, and others from Tubo (present-day Tibet) welcoming her. The
entire mosaic is very compact in terms of arrangement, with clear space levels
and brilliant colors that create an ardent atmosphere and vividly reappear in
the grand scene depicting Princess Wencheng entering Tibet.
Shell mosaics produced in Qingdao feature a unique style
with a novel picture arrangement, handsome composition and bright colors. In
1982, the city walked away with second prize during a national shell mosaic
competition. Its outstanding works were subsequently exhibited in more than 10
countries, including Japan, Britain, Germany, France and Kuwait, winning a
favorable response. Currently, shell mosaics produced in the city sell very well
in over 60 countries and regions around the world.
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