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Flower on Tibetan Plateau
Since the middle of the barbola is slightly convex, the work
creates a strong three-dimensional effect that looks like a colored embossment
made of silk material. Barbola subjects generally come from Buddhist stories,
and most of them are about people. Barbola pays much attention to posture and
the details of human figures, and values the arrangement of silks and satins of
different colors. It features an exquisite touch amid roughness, gives
prominence to its major subjects, has vivid colors and forms a strong contrast.
Barbola is an innovation in embroidery art, combining embroidery and embossment.
3. Sculpture
Sculpture, which holds an important position among Regong art, mainly
includes clay sculpture, woodcarving, brick engraving and so on, among which
clay sculpting is the most popular. The art of clay sculptures had matured from
the mid-17th century to the early 19th century when the sculptures were
exquisitely carved and were lifelike, with smooth clothing lines, a sense of
reality and a strong contrast in colors that were arranged harmoniously.
The clay sculptures in Regong were combined with monastic architecture to
express the wide-ranging contents related to the architecture. The range of
subjects is also very wide. Besides the sun, moon and stars, mountains, flowers
and trees, birds, beasts, fishes and worms and other patterns used as
decorations and foils, different colors and other various images also appear in
sculptures. These include the bizarre motley Buddhist guardians, Buddha's
warrior attendants with horrifying features, horse-headed and red-haired gods,
and so on.
In addition, woodcarving and brick engraving can also be found in many
places. Woodcarving is mainly employed to make decorative patterns on door
lintels and chapiters of a house, as well as wooden josses. Brick carving is
mainly seen in such forms of architecture as decorative patterns, dragons and
phoenixes and pairs of lions on the ridge of a house, beasts on flying roofs and
basso reliefs on walls.
4. "Magnificent Spectacle of Color Paintings About Chinese Tibetan Culture
and Arts"
Planned and designed by famous painter Zongzhe Lajie and jointly painted by
about 400 artists, this huge scroll
painting was completed in August 1999 after four years of painstaking
efforts.
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