The Guangyuan Thousand Buddha Cliffside Statues lie on the east bank of the Jialing River, 4
kilometres north of Guangyuan City, Sichuan Province.
The Thousand Buddha Cliffside Statues are on the wall of the cliff that is about 420 metres long and about
40 metres high, whose scale is the largest among the grottoes in Sichuan
Province. The grottoes and shrines there are arranged layer upon layer, which
reach 13 layers at most. It was recorded on a stone tablet built in the fourth
year (1854) of the Xianfeng rein in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911) that there used
to be altogether more than 17,000 statues on the cliff. However in 1935, about
half of the statues were destroyed when the cliff was blown up to make for the
Chuanshan Road. Now, there only exist more than 400 shrines and grottoes, and
more than 7,000 statues. According to the History of
Guangyuan County, there are 27 segments of the Tang
Dynasty (618-907), 5 segments of the Five Dynasties Period (907-960), 26
segments of the Song Dynasty (960-1279), 26 segments of the Yuan Dynasty
(1271-1368), 8 segments of the Ming Dynasty (1368-1911), and 41 segments without
exact record of date. Besides these, there are one more hundred inscriptions and
Cliffside stone carvings of the Tang, Song, Yuan, Ming, Qing
Dynasties.
Taking the Dayun Cave as the centre, the
statues on the Thousand-Buddha Cliff can be divided into two parts: the north
and the south. The famous grottoes in the south part include the Big Buddha
Cave, the Lotus Cave, the Sakyamuni Cave, the Thousand-Buddha Cave, the Sleeping
Buddha Cave, and the Multi Treasures Buddha Cave, etc.; those in the north part
include the Three World Buddhas (Amida Buddha, Sakyamuni Buddha and
Bhaisajyaguru Buddha) Grotto, the Maitreya Buddha Grotto, the Three
Buddha Bodies Shrines, the Vairocana Buddha Shrine, and the Hiding Buddha Cave
of the Qing Dynasty, etc. There is a fine collection of the carving works from
the Northern and Southern Dynasties Period (386-581), Tang, Song to Qing
dynasties (618-1911), all of which have feature particular artistic flavour and
exquisite craftsmanship.
The Dayun Cave, lying in the centre of the
Thousand-Buddha Cliff, is 3.8 metres high, 3.6 metres wide and 10.6 metres long.
In the right middle of the cave, there is a standing statue of the Maitreya
Buddha (Laughing Buddha), with broad shoulder, fat body, round face, and curved
eyebrows. He seems composed and happy, exposing his abdomen with eternal laugh.
Behind the statue there is a cone-shaped stone wall, along both sides of which
are carved many small shrines and Bodhisattvas. There are two deep shrines cut
in each side, which house seven statues, including one Buddha, two disciples,
two Bodhisattvas and two Hercules. The two walls were carved into half-round,
engraved with 148 Bodhisattvas, all in attires flying in the sky and showing
very special dispositions.
The Buddhas in the Big Buddha Cave and the
Three-Sage Shrine, with small eyes and thin lips, look fine and delicate. The
attendants, with prominent foreheads and deep Nasolabial folds, seem simple and
elegant. Their hair is arranged into two buns on the top of the head, and two
ribbons hanging from the ears and the capes are placed in front of the abdomens.
The two grottoes are different from other ones in terms of the features of the
Lotus Throne and the Buddha Shrine. They must have been the works of the
Southern and Northern Dynasties Period. There are inscriptions written in the
first year (555) of the Tiancheng reign of the Liang Kingdom in the Southern
Dynasty (420-589) in the Three-Sage Grotto on the right side of the Dayun Cave.
The three statues in the grotto, with simple and unsophisticated facial
expressions and elegant clothes, are similar to the statues in Big Buddha Cave,
and all of them are the earliest statues in the Thousand-Buddha
Cliff.
The Lotus Cave was named after a lotus with
a diameter of 1.2 metres in the right middle of the sunk panel. People in the
Song Dynasty (960-1279) painted peonies around the lotus, and the seedpod of
lotus was painted as Bagua Taiji (the Diagram of the Eight Trigrams and
Cosmological Scheme) of Taoism. In the east, north and south walls of the cave,
each one has a big shrine, with one Buddha and two attendants in it. The
Buddhas, with a round face and broad shoulders, are in the round-collared
clothes with cassock covering just one shoulder, and there is a peach-shaped
halo behind each Buddha. In the space between the three shrines, there are 96
small shrines and 130 more statues such as Buddha, Arhat and Bodhisattva. In the
Sleeping Buddha Cave, the Sakyamuni was sleeping on one side, with serene
expression. The disciples standing behind him are in different postures and
expressions. Some of them are beating their breasts, some are crying or sobbing.
At each side of the Buddha, stands a Bodhisattva, who is against a Borneo Tree
that has a dragon crouching around the trunk. There are two series of
basso-relievos on the north wall of the grotto, narrating the story of
the Buddha burning himself in the gold
coffin. This shrine is the masterpiece of the
stone-carved statues of the Tang Dynasty.
There are other exquisitely-carved small
shrines in the Thousand-Buddha Cliff, in which are vivid figures, such as the
artists in Hu dressing, goddess dancing with the music, flying man with two
wings, soldiers in a suit of armour, all kinds of birds and beasts, fairy tales
and so on. It is the treasure house of the art of China ancient grottoes because
of their rich contents.