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The grotto art
of Dazu County,160km north-west of Chongqing, is rated alongside
China's other great Buddhist cave sculpture at Dunhunag, Luoyang and
Datong. Historical records for Dazu are sketchy. The cliff carvings
and statues(with Buddhisit, Taoist and Confucian influences)amount
to thousands of pieces, large and small, scattered over the county
in some 40-odd places. The main groupings are at Beishan (North
Hill) and the more interesting Baoding. They date from the Tang
Dynasty (9th century) to the Song (13th century).
The town of
Dazu is a small, unhurried place. It's also been relatively
unvisited by Westerners-though this is gradually changing and the
surrounding countryside is superb.
Beishan
Beishan is
about a 30-minute hike from Dazu town-aim straight for the pogoda
visible from the bus station. There are goodoverall views from the
top of the hill. The dark niches hold small statues, many in poor
condition; only one or two really stand out.
Niche No136
depicts Puxian, the patron saint (male) of Emeishan, riding a white
elephant. The same niche has the androgynous Sun and moon Guanyin.
Niche 155 holds a bit more talent, the Peacock King. According to
inscriptions, the Beishan site was originally a military camp, with
the earliest carvings commissioned by a general.
Baoding
Fifteen km
north-east of Dazu town, the Baoding sculptures are definitely more
interesting than those at Beishan. The founding work is attributed
to Zhao Zhifeng, a monk from an obscure Yoga sect of Tantric
Buddhism. There's a monastery with nice wood-work and throngs of
pilgrims. On the lower section of the hill on which the monastery
sits is a horseshoe-shaped cliff sculptured with coloured figures,
some of them up to eight metres high. The centrepiece is a
31-metre-long, five-metre-high reclining buddha, torso sunk into the
cliff face-most peaceful.
Staues around
the rest of the 125-metre horseshoe vary considerably: Buddhist
preachers and sages, historical figures, realistic scenes(on the
rear of a postcard one is described as "pastureland-Cowboy at
Rest')and delicate sculptures a few cm in height. Some of them have
lost layers of paint, but generally there is a remarkable survival
rate (fanatical Red Guards did descend on the Dazu area bent on
defacing the sculptures, but were stopped-so the story goes-by an
urhent order from Zhou Enlai).
Baoding
differs from other grottoes in that it was based on a preconceived
plan which incorporated some of the area's natural features - a
sculpture next to the reclining buddha, for example, makes use ofan
underground spring. Completion of the sculptures is believed to have
taken 70 years, between 1179 and 1249 AD. It's easy to spend a few
hours wandering around this area. Show-pieces are the enormous
reclining buddha and, inside a small temple on the carved cliff, the
doddess of mercy, with a spectacular gilt forest of fingers (1007
hands if you care to check). Each hand has an eye, the symbol of
wisdom. But besides the major attractions there are countless minor
details that will capture your attention.
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