Archive for March 30th, 2010

Chinese Culture – Buddhist Art at Dunhuang(2)

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Dunhuang Manuscripts and Documents

About 60,000 paper manuscripts, printed documents and fragments — now preserved in Beijing , Paris, London and St. Petersburg — were found in a secret sealed-up cave discovered at the end of the 19th century. A sizeable chunk of these treasures are part of the Stein Collection at the British Library, including the world’s earliest printed book, the Diamond Sutra (circa AD868). Most of the collection is available in surrogate form. The collection of Dunhuang Chinese manuscripts at the National Library of China comprises over 10,000 Chinese scrolls. The International Dunhuang Project was established in 1993 to promote the study and preservation of manuscripts and printed documents from Dunhuang and other central Asian sites via international cooperation. A joint study between the Dunhuang Academy and Japanese researchers was formed for the conservation of the wall paintings and statues.

Painted Statues and Flying Apsaras

Dunhuang has 2,415 painted statues and five wooden-structured caves. The Mogao Grottoes contain priceless paintings, sculptures, some 50,000 Buddhist scriptures, historical documents, textiles, and other relics that first stunned the world in the early 1900s.

The walls of the 492 Mogao Caves include frescoes that cover over 45,000 square meters. There are about 4,500 Flying Apsaras figures found in some 270 caves.

Feminization of the Bodhisattvas

In Indian caves, the proportions of the body, postures and facial expressions were all constructed in a realistic yet highly imaginative manner. The figures display a strong distinction in terms of gender, both in physique and disposition: The male figures have plump faces, moustaches and robust bodies while the female figures have round faces, big eyes, long eyebrows, thick lips, full breasts, slim waists, broad hips and bare feet. The sex organs of male and female figures are also clearly marked. Although Kucan figures inherited this style, they did not like to represent naked deities.

Source: chinaculture.org

Learn Chinese Podcast – Green Bean Cake

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Green Bean Cake Green Bean CakeTaste: Sweet and delicious.

Features: Slippery and soft.

Ingredients:

300 grams (0.66 lb) glutinous rice floor

200 grams (0.44 lb) non-glutinous rice flour

250 grams (0.55 lb) green beans

250 grams (0.55 lb) sugar

20 grams (1 1/2 tbsp) cooking oil

Directions:

1. Wash the green beans and cook in 500 g (1 cup) of water till the beans explode. Put the beans into a container to cool off.

2. Mix the two kinds of rice flours. Add the sugar, oil and the cooled off beans and mix well. Put the mixture in a porcelain plate on whose surface oil has been rubbed. Steam for 45 minutes and the cakes are ready.

(Source: culture.chinese.cn)

Chinese Character – yào

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

yào

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Introduction:

Definition: grandfather

Text:

药方[yào fāng]   prescription

中药[zhōng yào] traditional Chinese medicine

药房[yào fáng] drug store

药剂师[yào jì shī] pharmacist

Wǒ de mā ma shì gè yào jì shī。

我 的 妈 妈 是 个 药 剂师。

My mother is aa pharmacist。

Download List:

1.yao003.swf(0.51 MB)

(Source: resource.chinese.cn)