China Daily

Terracotta Warriors draw army of admirers

- By DONG LESHUO in Washington leshuodong@chinadaily­usa.com

China’s Terracotta Warriors, a marvel of the world, have attracted more than 68,000 visitors to the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond since its opening in November.

The exhibition — Terracotta Army: Legacy of the First Emperor of China — features 10 majestic terracotta figures, including a cavalry horse, among 130 works that tell the story of China’s birth and the first emperor of China, Qin Shihuang (259-210 BC).

Gathered from 14 museums and archaeolog­ical institutes across Shaanxi province, the exhibition also features arms and armor, horse and chariot fittings, ritual bronze vessels, works in gold and silver, jade ornaments, precious jewelry and ceramics.

The exhibition will be shown at the VMFA until March 11, before it moves to the Cincinnati museum. It is the first exhibition that the museum has presented in its 80-year history, which is devoted to the art and archaeolog­y of ancient China. More than 40 objects in the exhibition have never been displayed in the United States before.

“Chinese artists and Chinese culture have been making great art for more than 5,000 years. Americans know so little about the continuum of Chinese art history, how unbroken it is and how magnificen­t it is. So this is a way for us to show Virginia and America how magnificen­t the Chinese creative world has been, for millennia”, VMFA director Alex Nyerges said at the opening reception of the exhibition at the Chinese embassy in Washington.

‘Truly remarkable’

The exhibition is divided into three sections: The First Emperor and Unificatio­n of China, Birth of the Qin Empire and Quest for Immortalit­y.

“The exhibit is truly remarkable. It puts the Terracotta Warriors in historical context and describes the developmen­t of the Chinese culture. The artifacts are displayed beautifull­y and include decorative items, tools, weapons and architectu­ral pieces. And, of course, the warriors themselves, which are astonishin­g in their realism. Each is unique, depicting various occupation­s and having distinct faces,” said one visitor.

“It was fabulous. I was thrilled to see the terracotta soldiers up close and the details of their individual faces. The sampling of the different types of officers and the close-up details of their dress also was very interestin­g. In China, I saw the whole army in the pit, but you have to stand in a gallery and are too far away to see the details,” another visitor said.

Discovered in 1974 by farmers in China, the undergroun­d army of nearly 8,000 life-size terracotta figures is considered one of the greatest archaeolog­ical finds of the 20th century.

The Terracotta Army, found about 2 kilometers east of the known burial site of Qin Shihuang, was created to accompany the emperor to the afterlife.

This is a way for us to show Virginia and America how magnificen­t the Chinese creative world has been, for millennia.” Alex Nyerges, VMFA director

 ?? DONG LESHUO / CHINA DAILY ?? Visitors look at a Terracotta chariot at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond on Dec 24. The exhibition has attracted more than 68,000 visitors since November.
DONG LESHUO / CHINA DAILY Visitors look at a Terracotta chariot at the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond on Dec 24. The exhibition has attracted more than 68,000 visitors since November.

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