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Culture

Pictorial tribute to Dunhuang Pinoneer(2)

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2017-03-14 13:42China Daily Editor: Li Yan ECNS App Download
A piece of Chang Shana's work. (Photo provided to China Daily)

A piece of Chang Shana's work. (Photo provided to China Daily)

At her father's instructions, Chang Shana duplicated almost all the finest examples of murals dated from the fourth century AD to the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368).

Meanwhile, she learned from her father how the styles for the murals had evolved.

Wu Weishan, director of the National Art Museum of China, says it is beyond imagination how a teenage girl could recreate such dazzling costumes, free lines and peaceful facial expressions of the figures, and how she was able to handle grand compositions in which there were a lot of deities and intricate decorative patterns.

"She transformed the skill of copying into creative, comprehensive designs to cater to the needs of modern life," Wu says.

While her father introduced her to the brilliance of Dunhuang, it was Lin Huiyin (1904-55), who helped Chang Shana develop into a designer.

She became an assistant teacher at Tsinghua University's architecture department in 1951 where Lin was a professor. And she explored modern design under Lin's guidance.

"Lin believed that only when classic Chinese art and craft were represented in novel ways, could we improve the form and function of industrial design," says Chang Shana.

So, she incorporated the styles and patterns of Dunhuang's art in the decoration of Beijing's "top 10 architecture" in 1958, including the Great Hall of the People and the Cultural Palace of Nationalities.

She also used these decorative elements when designing scarves and tea sets, and her drafts are on display at the ongoing exhibition.

The show also includes her paintings of costumes and ornaments worn by figures on the murals.

Most of the works were produced after she retired in 1998 as the head of the Central Academy of Arts and Crafts (now Tsinghua University's Academy of Arts and Design).

Chang Shana once received a letter from her father saying, "Shana, do not forget that you are from Dunhuang."

"I was very lucky to have a great father," she says. "He gave me not only a passion for art but more importantly taught me loyalty to my country. He put the needs of his people and art before his personal interests. I feel the same way."

Contact the writer at linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

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