Return of a goddess
Updated: 2015-06-16 07:11
By Wang Kaihao(China Daily)
|
||||||||
Team members of the project undertake the restoration work. [Photo provided to China Daily] |
Zhan explains that water seepage and weather damage are the main causes of the statue's deterioration, though modern air pollutants have accelerated its corrosion. He says 34 kinds of pathogens were detected in the statue. The team used X-ray and 3-D laser scanning to collect information and give each of 830 hands an "ID card", among which 283 were found to have been damaged.
The statue was removed from public view in 2007. It took another four years of organized appraisals until the final rescue plan was approved by the State Administration of Cultural Heritage. Other institutions joined the project, including the Dunhuang Research Academy, Tsinghua University and Peking University.
Not everyone agreed on how to go about the work. For example, traditional academics considered it important to preserve the "old look", Zhan says.
"But cultural relics are not dead," he says. "It's better to return a bright facade to this site with strong functionality. We cannot stubbornly borrow Western theories of restoration anymore."
Less than 20 percent of the original gold layers coating the statue had survived. The team decided to replace all of those with new gilded surfaces to avoid a mottled appearance, requiring about 100 kilograms of gold leaf. Zhan says this restores the statue's intended aesthetic values.
"People will only see the new faces afterwards, so it's better to soon publish a report on the restoration project based on the data collected before to give people a comparison with the old days," says Sun Hua, an archeology professor at Peking University.
There had been five major restorations since the creation of this statue, most recently in the late 19th century. Scientists have found there were flaws during the restorations in ancient times.
For example, many hands' backsides were not covered with gold leaf to save money, and some small, broken Buddha statues were not restored at all. After tense discussions, the panel finally decided to restore the original appearance, fixing previous restorers' errors.
- Ten photos you don't wanna miss - June 16
- Shaolin monks harvest bumper crop
- Cambridge students mark end of exam with boat race
- Village attracts tourists after first lady's visit
- Top 9 US-listed Chinese companies going private
- Hainan San Jose to Beijing: Ready for take-off
- Trending Across China: A Porsche gilded in gold
- Paris Air Show: From Bombardier's new C Series to China Airlines
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Premier Li embarks on Latin America visit |
What do we know about AIIB |
Full coverage of Boao Forum for Asia |
Annual legislative and political advisory sessions |
Spring Festival trends reflect a changing China |
Patent applications lead the world |
Today's Top News
Key China-US talks
next week
Jeb Bush announces bid for 2016 Republican presidential run
Alibaba set for online video-streaming launch
China, US develop new MERS treatment
China to complete land reclamation of construction on some Nansha Islands soon
Military launches drive to root out corruption in construction projects
China, US sign agreement to boost army cooperation
City honors slain NYPD
Detective Liu
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |