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Pair of T'ang Sancai-Glazed Terracotta Civic Officials - H.745 *CLICK IMAGE TO ENLARGE* The T’ang Dynasty was an era of unrivalled wealth and luxury. The country was successfully reunified and the borders were expanded, pushing Chinese influence into new lands. Confucianism became a semi-religious instrument of the state; yet Buddhism continued to flourish, spreading into Korea and Japan. The arts reached new levels of sophistication. Poetry and literature flourished under the enlightened rulers. The Silk Road brought fortunes into China. Precious treasures were imported on the backs of camels from far away lands and bartered for Chinese silk, medicinal herbs, and pungent spices. T’ang China was a multicultural empire where foreign merchants from across Central Asia and the Middle East settled in the urban centers, foremost among them the thriving capital of Chang’an (modern X’ian), a bustling cosmopolitan center of over two million inhabitants. Foreign traders lived next to native artisans and both thrived. New ideas and exotic artistic forms followed alongside. The T’ang Dynasty was a cultural renaissance where many of the forms and objects we now associate with China were first created. Moreover, this period represents one of the greatest cultural outpourings in human history. These civic officials represented the role of the government in the life of the citizens, as significant to their well being as military might. The facial features of these figures, including their aquiline noses and serene expressions, reveal their intellectual wisdom and calm restraint. The gorgeous Sancai glaze covers their robes, and even parts of their faces. Buried underground, these officials were interred in order to welcome the deceased into the afterlife and to ensure his comfort in the great beyond. - (H.745)
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