Mural Painting Art
Grotto and temple
mural paintings of different dynasties ranging from the Wei Dynasty (220-265AD)
to the Ming (1368-1644BC) and Qing (1644-1911) Dynasties, varied a lot in
composition. In the Kezier Grotto of Northwest China's Xinjiang
Uigur Autonomous Region, the mural paintings within feature a rhombic
(parallelogram of equal side and slanting angles) composition of the Buddhism
stories. The NO.21 grotto of the Kumutula Grottos has a radiant composition,
with a round design pattern in the ceiling as its center and 13 trapezoid-shaped
grids radiating from it. Within each grid there is a figure of Bodhisattva.
The "Deer King" (section) cave 257 of Dunhuang
Grotto in Northwest China's Gansu
Province, features a horizontal composition. Mural paintings retelling the
story of the deer king are arranged from left to right. The other type of
Dunhuang mural paintings usually feature grand scene of various activities, with
the Buddha at the center and Bodhisattva, music players, dancers, ponds and
water lilies surrounding it.
The composition of the temple's mural paintings also has unique
characteristics. For example, the Mandala mural painting in one of Tibet's Buddhist
temple , with its combination of the round and square shapes, expresses the
principle of the natural life and death cycle that humans can't exceed, and has
kind of unique artistic charm.
The mural painting in the Yongle Palace of the Yuan
Dynasty (1206-1368) has the same type of composition with those in the Ming
Dynasty in Fahai temple in Beijing
, which features a parallel composition.
Some modern mural paintings use traditional composition forms. For example,
the rhombic composition form of the mural painting in the Kezier Grotto in
Xinjiang Uigur Autonoumous Region has been applied in "The Beautiful Land of the
Country ", which is a modern mural painting, and the way of expression of the
Han Dynasty's stone mural paintings are also employed in modern mural painting.
|