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    Bricks Sculpture


    Bricks carved with patterns in relief were used for decorative purposes on the exterior of old houses-mansions of officials and the rich, shrines and temples, landscape buildings in parts. They are also found on the entrance gates, windows and screen walls in houses which once belonged to big business and the landed gentry, "to bring honour to the owners and their ancestors".

    Carvings on bricks may cover a wide range of subjects. Usually seen are human figures drawn from popular legends, dra­mas and folklore, most of them lifelike and spirited. Animals and plants are also favourite subjects, mostly those portend­ing power and good luck or representing certain lofty qualities, for example, dragon, phoenix, plum, bamboo, crysanthemum and so on. Other carvings represent at­tempts to reproduce traditional paintings on bricks. Apart from the sculpted pictures, they are often complete with in­scriptions and seal marks. This particular art of sculpture was done on a kind of carefully polished blue brick. It was called fang zhuan (square brick) in the Ming Dynasty and jin zhuan ("gold" brick, see a preceding article of this title under ARCHITECTURE) in the Qing Dynasty. This brick was fine in texture and most suitable for carving, but as it was also brittle, the work might be easily ruined by a slip of the carving tool.

    The large numbers of brick-carvings which we can still see today are impres­sive with their vivid figures, their compo­sition in depths and on varying levels, giv­ing a feeling of three dimensions and appealing with an impact not found in frescoes.

     

     

     

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