Beyond the Forbidden Gardens
Terra cotta warriors come alive at HMNS (really): Statue springs to life toscare
The Terra Cotta Warriors: Guardians Of China's First Emperorexhibition, which included more than 100 objects from the tomb of Chinese Emperor Qin Shi Huang, set attendance records during its tour of the United States.
A stop at the Houston Museum of Natural Science in 2009 left Houstonians and museum officials wanting more — especially after Katy's Forbidden Gardens closed — and now we've got it: Warriors, Tombs and Temples: China's Enduring Legacy opened Friday.
Unlike the first exhibitions, which featured artifacts solely from the Qin dynasty, Warriors, Tombs and Temples traces the history of the Chinese empire from the Qin (which lasted 221 through 206 BCE), the Han dynasty (206 BCE through 8 CE) and the Tang dynasty (619 through 907 CE).
If this isn't enough, this exhibition touts an extremely rare terra cotta warrior that still retains its original paint.
That's over 1000 years of history, folks.
"Through excavations, we are reconstructing daily life of ancient Chinese people and illustrating how they organized their cities, decorated their homes and traded with other countries," explained Dr. Dirk Van Tuerenhout, HMNS curator of anthropology, who says that the exhibition reveals the quotidian in all three eras, from the top levels of society down.
"Obviously each dynasty grows out of the other, from its roots, but the recurring theme is how these people lived," Van Tuerenhout told CultureMap.
Trade with other countries, especially along the Silk Road, influenced that daily life: Throughout the exhibition, evidence of interaction with other cultures abounds — from Buddhist imagery, to Roman glass, to a carefully-preserved plaster mural that depicts a polo game.
If this isn't enough, this exhibition touts an extremely rare terra cotta warrior that still retains its original paint. And another one that comes to life. Really.
Jarry, a performance artist who travels with the exhibition, is dressed in full warrior costume. He kneels as still as a statue on a pedestal near the actual terra cotta warriors as visitors move throughout the room. Beware: He may try to scare you.
Watch history come to life until the exhibition closes on Sept. 3.