"/>

丝袜脚交免费网站xx-国产91丝袜在线播放-国产视频一区二区三区在线观看-午夜美女视频-午夜爽爽视频-制服丝袜先锋影音-天天躁日日躁狠狠躁喷水-日韩综合一区二区三区-99思思-日本体内she精视频-欧美精品免费播放-日韩欧美国产不卡-一级在线免费观看视频-韩国午夜理伦三级在线观看按摩房-伦乱激情视频

Art project expected to facilitate China-U.S. exchanges

Source: Xinhua    2018-06-24 00:50:48

SAN FRANCISCO, June 23 (Xinhua) -- A Stanford University professor's art project based on the ancient city of Dunhuang in northwest China is expected to promote the understanding of the Asian country in the contemporary age.

Xie Xiaoze, the Paul L. & Phyllis Wattis Professor of Art at Stanford University, presented his work-in-progress to the public Thursday night at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

The project, called "the amber of history," is inspired by the artist's 25 days of artist residency in the summer of 2017 at the Mogao Grottoes in Dunhuang, a historic site of Buddhist art on the ancient Silk Road.

Mogao Grottoes are hundreds of cave temples carved more than 1,000 years ago in Dunhuang. The caves, decorated with Buddhist murals and sculptures, are a World Heritage site.

Xie's research focused on Cave 17, known as the Library Cave. Once an important cache of manuscripts, scrolls, paintings and textiles sealed up by walls from the fourth to the 11th century, the cave is now empty and relics are dispersed in collections around the world.

He showed the audience a photo he took at the site, in which a big rock bears the inscription of "Dunhuang is the history of sorrow for our academia" by Chinese historian Chen Yinke, who regretted the loss of the valuable cultural relics that had adversely affected the study of Dunhuang inside China.

Xie said he took long walks into deserts for inspiration and spent a week making research at Dunhuang Academy before moving to the studio.

Through a long scroll of brush and ink drawings, combined with diagrams, calligraphy and quoted images, Xie casts his imaginations of the now empty cave and confronts its history of loss, absence and trauma.

The drawings are a framework for an ambitious project, which will include a number of sculptures representing the "original order" of the cave through his "versions of imagination."

He explained a few versions at the presentation, including "texture of realization," "re-imagination of colors" and "symphony of languages."

Xie said he would continue to create more versions and test materials while seeking funding for his project. He will return to Dunhuang later this year for further studies.

The presentation was co-sponsored by Tsinghua Institute of Culture and Creativity, and the Dunhuang Foundation, a San Francisco-based organization which sponsored Xie's artist residency program in Dunhuang last year.

The program aims to help American people better understand China through traditional culture.

Deputy Chinese Consul General in San Francisco Zha Liyou, who also attended the presentation, encouraged artists in both China and the United States to contribute to the people-to-people exchanges between the two countries through cultural projects.

Editor: Chengcheng
Related News
Xinhuanet

Art project expected to facilitate China-U.S. exchanges

Source: Xinhua 2018-06-24 00:50:48

SAN FRANCISCO, June 23 (Xinhua) -- A Stanford University professor's art project based on the ancient city of Dunhuang in northwest China is expected to promote the understanding of the Asian country in the contemporary age.

Xie Xiaoze, the Paul L. & Phyllis Wattis Professor of Art at Stanford University, presented his work-in-progress to the public Thursday night at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

The project, called "the amber of history," is inspired by the artist's 25 days of artist residency in the summer of 2017 at the Mogao Grottoes in Dunhuang, a historic site of Buddhist art on the ancient Silk Road.

Mogao Grottoes are hundreds of cave temples carved more than 1,000 years ago in Dunhuang. The caves, decorated with Buddhist murals and sculptures, are a World Heritage site.

Xie's research focused on Cave 17, known as the Library Cave. Once an important cache of manuscripts, scrolls, paintings and textiles sealed up by walls from the fourth to the 11th century, the cave is now empty and relics are dispersed in collections around the world.

He showed the audience a photo he took at the site, in which a big rock bears the inscription of "Dunhuang is the history of sorrow for our academia" by Chinese historian Chen Yinke, who regretted the loss of the valuable cultural relics that had adversely affected the study of Dunhuang inside China.

Xie said he took long walks into deserts for inspiration and spent a week making research at Dunhuang Academy before moving to the studio.

Through a long scroll of brush and ink drawings, combined with diagrams, calligraphy and quoted images, Xie casts his imaginations of the now empty cave and confronts its history of loss, absence and trauma.

The drawings are a framework for an ambitious project, which will include a number of sculptures representing the "original order" of the cave through his "versions of imagination."

He explained a few versions at the presentation, including "texture of realization," "re-imagination of colors" and "symphony of languages."

Xie said he would continue to create more versions and test materials while seeking funding for his project. He will return to Dunhuang later this year for further studies.

The presentation was co-sponsored by Tsinghua Institute of Culture and Creativity, and the Dunhuang Foundation, a San Francisco-based organization which sponsored Xie's artist residency program in Dunhuang last year.

The program aims to help American people better understand China through traditional culture.

Deputy Chinese Consul General in San Francisco Zha Liyou, who also attended the presentation, encouraged artists in both China and the United States to contribute to the people-to-people exchanges between the two countries through cultural projects.

[Editor: huaxia]
010020070750000000000000011100001372761581