Buddhist statues, gilded bronze, 700s,
Changwu County Museum.
Hidden treasures from Beijing’s Palace Museum in the Forbidden City didn’t come to Melbourne’s National Gallery of Victoria until 2015. The exhibition called A Golden Age of China: Qianlong Emperor 1736–1795 told the story of China’s most successful, long living ruler and foremost art collector, 4th emperor of the Qing Dynasty (1644–1911). This exhibition provided works from the Palace Museum’s art collection, built on the imperial collection of the Ming dynasty.
Then in 2016 the Art Gallery of New South Wales focused on an earlier Chinese empire that needed closer analysis. While much of Europe was still in the Dark Ages and London was just a market town of a few thousand people, the Tang Empire (618-907) was the most powerful realm in the world. The empire stretched from today’s Korea in the north, Vietnam in the south and far into Central Asia.
At the heart of Tang was its ancient capital, Chang’an/now Xi’an. Located at one end of the famous Silk Trade Route, this teeming cosmopolitan metropolis was noted for its great wealth, sophistication and cultural diversity; an advanced and outward-looking society that showed great tolerance of outsiders. It was home to 1 million people inside its intact and impressive walls, which tourists can still walk.
Earthenware camel & rider, 742.
Excavated from Li Xian's tomb. Shaanxi Institute of Archaeology
Gilded basket, silver, c850, from Famen Monastery,
Famen Temple Museum.
“Tang: Treasures from the Silk Road Capital” was a NSW exhibition that explored life in Chang’an during the Tang Empire. Each artefact carried a story from this extraordinary city; from the freedom and power of women to innovations in fashion and music, from the elevation of tea culture to an art form, to religious tolerance and the rise and fall of Buddhism. The booming artisanship in gold, silver and ceramics; to great innovations in Chinese fashion and music.
The works on display in the Tang Treasures demonstrated exceptional craftsmanship and storytelling power, including a C9th tea grinder that belonged to Emperor Xizong; an early C8th mural from the walls inside Prince Jiemin’s tomb; and a Hayagriva statue from the site of the Anguo Monastery, an important late Tang dynasty Buddhist centre.
Archaeological findings of sculptures and murals were unearthed from a Tang-era tomb in Xi’an. This exhibition showcased 135 spectacular objects from the Chinese province of Shaanxi, which demonstrated the high artistic achievements of the Tang dynasty (618–907).
Part of the 12 zodiac animals. earthenware.
Tang era tomb Xi'an.
Xuanzang was passionate for learning, returning home only after 17 years of adventure, to be feted by scholars, kings and emperors. And he brought 1335 volumes of sutras to Chang’an's royal courts. Xuanzang was described as the soul of Chinese nationality - a towering bronze statue of the monk was placed on the city’s main ancient road. With his traveller’s staff in hand, the tiers of the Great Wild Goose Pagoda rose up behind the statue. Here the monk conducted his translations, which were then stored in the same pagoda, a building that remains from the Tang dynasty.
Back then, Chang’an was China’s only cosmopolitan metropolis, having nearly a million people and being ruled by emperors who were the sons of heaven. The city’s layout was dominated by the Palace City and the Imperial City, a skyline of palaces, pagodas, temples, markets and monasteries, encircled by city walls and great city gates.
Chang’an’s wealth came from its strategic location on the great medieval trade route, Silk Road. Not only did the roads bring silk and other exotica, but it was also traversed by ideas, cultures and religions, including Buddhism. The legacy included gilded bronze dragons, mirrors inlaid with mother-of-pearl and turquoise, earthen-ware sets of China's zodiac (12 animals), ornate baskets wrought from silver and the faces of the Buddha, rendered in marble and stone.
But while many buildings were destroyed and the caves declined into fragility, precious objects of gold, silver, ceramic, glass and elaborate mural paintings were carefully preserved and guarded. These objects of great cultural significance were displayed at the NSW Exhibition which showed how the Golden Age continued; the legend of the scholar and his celestial companions lived on.
Dragon, 700s gilded bronze & iron, Caochangpo Xian, Shaanxi History Mus
All photos from Alaintruong Archives
Back then, Chang’an was China’s only cosmopolitan metropolis, having nearly a million people and being ruled by emperors who were the sons of heaven. The city’s layout was dominated by the Palace City and the Imperial City, a skyline of palaces, pagodas, temples, markets and monasteries, encircled by city walls and great city gates.
Chang’an’s wealth came from its strategic location on the great medieval trade route, Silk Road. Not only did the roads bring silk and other exotica, but it was also traversed by ideas, cultures and religions, including Buddhism. The legacy included gilded bronze dragons, mirrors inlaid with mother-of-pearl and turquoise, earthen-ware sets of China's zodiac (12 animals), ornate baskets wrought from silver and the faces of the Buddha, rendered in marble and stone.
But while many buildings were destroyed and the caves declined into fragility, precious objects of gold, silver, ceramic, glass and elaborate mural paintings were carefully preserved and guarded. These objects of great cultural significance were displayed at the NSW Exhibition which showed how the Golden Age continued; the legend of the scholar and his celestial companions lived on.
Famen Temple, famous for storing the veritable Finger Bone of the Sakyamuni Buddha, is in Shaanxi Province, east of Xi'an. The gilded basket above (c850) was brought to Australia from the Famen Temple Museum. As was a basin with mandarin ducks and floral medallion design (800).






19 comments:
Hello Hels,
This all makes for a fascinating read. The Tang Dynasty was certainly a Golden Age with so many beautifully crafted artefacts. The exhibition was clearly a most comprehensive view of this somewhat hidden world of China.
We know little of Chinese history but the Silk Road, even its very name, holds an allure of the exotic items which passed along it and, as you write, carrying with them all manner of different cultural experiences, ideas and philosophies.
I have seen beautiful Chinese art in the Art Gallery of NSW eg figure of Bodhisattva from China (1280-1320). But all the pieces you have shown are 8th century and perhaps more precious.
Treasures from such ancient civilizations are wondrous, displaying such skill and attention to detail.
Hello Hels, Australia has been lucky to get the loan of these Chinese treasures, especially in a context that explains their meaning and importance. I have been spoiled living in Taipei, not far from perhaps the world's best museum of Chinese art, the Taipei Palace Museum. Your post is inspiring me to make a repeat visit soon, although it is hard to get past the paintings and the porcelains to the more ancient displays.
--Jim
It’s remarkable how the brilliance of the Tang dynasty radiated far beyond China’s borders, shaping the courtly rituals, aesthetics, writing systems and even statecraft of neighbouring cultures, with Korea and Japan drawing deeply from its cosmopolitan legacy
I remember visiting the very impressive exhibition in Melbourne, which would have been about 2015.
Jane and Lance, hey strangers :)
When I was an art history student and later as a lecturer, I assumed I knew everything about the topic - French, Italy, Germany, British, Netherlands, Spain etc etc. But I too knew VERY little of Chinese history *blush*
So here are the dynasties and their approx dates (see History Hit):
c2100-1600 BCE Xia (Hsia) Dynasty
c1600-1050 BCE 3 Shang Dynasties Xia, Shang and Zhou
c1046-256 BCE Western Zhou (c1046-771 BCE), Eastern Zhou (771-256 BCE)
221-206 BCE Qin Dynasty; unitary state
206 BCE-220 CE Western Han (206 BCE-9 CE) and Eastern Han (25-220 CE)
220-589 CE Six Dynasties Period; China disunified
581-618 CE Sui Dynasty; China reunified.
618-906 Tang Dynasty
960-1279 Northern Song (960-1127), Southern Song (1127-1279)
1279-1368 Yuan Dynasty Founded by the Mongols
1368-1644 Ming Dynasty
1644-1912 Qing Dynasty, a Manchu dynasty.
1912-1949 Republic Period
Joe
The C8th Tang dynasty showed benevolent rule, successful diplomacy, economic boom, and a cultural florescence, a great medieval empire. AND it was located on the brilliant Silk Trade Route. So I expect the Chinese valued and protected their Tang arts the most, even though they showed the great tolerance of outsiders.
jabblog
Chinese art back then was characterised by its emphasis on symbolism, harmony with nature, calligraphy skills, ancestor worship and development of bronze.
Chinese art was also used in religious ceremonies, politics and the expression of philosophical values, but then so was European art.
Parnassus
you are very very fortunate! Your museum holds a permanent collection of 700,000 artworks, showing items relocated from the Beijing Palace Museum and other institutions in mainland China. The National Palace Museum art dates from the Tang dynasty (618–907) on - including landscape, flower and bird and figure art. Among the most popular paintings in the collection are by five Qing dynasty court painters. And the museum has many calligraphy works from calligraphers, scholars and courtiers, dating from the Jin (266–420) dynasty on.
But I would rather see the bronzes, jade carvings and other decorative arts.
roentare
quite right! The Tang dynasty militarily expanded into Asia, controlled the endless trade in silk etc, expanded endless art and other cultural influences and built a strong maritime trade. No wonder they flourished.
Andrew
Did you see the "China: The Past is Present" NGV exhibition in 2022? The important historical works lay alongside some of innovative modern works, exploring key Chinese cultural movements, ideas and art media to provide an understanding of modern China. Did you see the painting, calligraphy, ceramics, metal works, lacquer ware, textiles etc?
I did not. I only wanted to see the important historical works.
It's such a pity or shame that the exhibition didn't come to Tasmania.
I enjoyed reading the history as I always do and I love those zodiac animals, Hels.
Read the development of Buddhist Art in various Chinese dynasties and view the collections of statues and arts in our gallery.
Since numerous Chinese Buddhist monks travelled to India to learn teachings of Buddha, they were influenced by the art forms. When they returned their place, they began to continue the similar art form. These travels were possible due to the Tang dynasty's openness to foreign influences. But the foreign influences were perceived negatively towards the end of the dynasty. In 845 CE a Tang emperor outlawed all foreign religions in order to support the indigenous religion, Taoism. This decision greatly affects the flourish of Buddhism in China.
Margaret
You may have just missed a recent exhibition at the Queen Victoria Museum and Art Gallery, Royal Park Launceston. It included Chinese ceramics, glass and wooden antiquities from the collection of Professor Wong. It represented a history of the development of Chinese culture from the earliest Neolithic pottery to early C20th objects. See a well preserved Painted Pottery Horse from the Tang Dynasty (618-907 CE).
Contact the QVMAG to see if you can buy a brochure about the collection.
Original Buddhas
thank you. That explains why Buddhist art reached its peak in the Tang dynasty, although Buddhism did continue to receive official patronage under successive dynasties.
When the basket came did it contain the finger? I don't know much about Chinese art, but it is always very interesting to look at. Hope your week is going well Hels.
Erika
the veritable Finger Bone of the Sakyamuni Buddha is a very holy pilgrim site for Buddhists, so I cannot imagine that it would ever be removed from the Famen Temple.
Boa sexta-feira minha querida amiga. Fica difícil falar sobre esse tesouro maravilhoso. Obrigado pela aula de história e as imagens são maravilhosas. Sobre a Rota da Seda conheço bem pouco essa parte da sua história. Ontem provei uma fruta chamada amora e que através das suas folhas, servem de alimento para o bicho-da-seda. Grande abraço do Brasil.
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