Intangible culture with Related Tags
Furniture making skills (Beijing small woodcarving)
Beijing woodcarving small objects, with unique ideas and exquisite craftsmanship, have formed an artistic style of respect, simplicity, simplicity and dignity, reflecting the characteristics and cultural value of Beijing woodcarving culture. Furniture making skills (Beijing woodcarving small objects), woodcarving products are divided into two categories: one is the wooden base, including natural base, silver wire base, flower base and plain base, and the other is wooden furnishings, including the four treasures of the study, desk screens, hanging screens, wooden plaques, etc. Furniture making skills (Beijing woodcarving small objects) vary according to different products, but can basically be completed according to the process of design, woodworking, painting, turning, chiseling, chiseling, shoveling, filing, grinding, coloring, hot waxing and lacquering.
Furniture making skills (Beijing small woodcarving)
Beijing woodcarving small objects, with unique ideas and exquisite craftsmanship, have formed an artistic style of respect, simplicity, simplicity and dignity, reflecting the characteristics and cultural value of Beijing woodcarving culture. Furniture making skills (Beijing woodcarving small objects), woodcarving products are divided into two categories: one is the wooden base, including natural base, silver wire base, flower base and plain base, and the other is wooden furnishings, including the four treasures of the study, desk screens, hanging screens, wooden plaques, etc. Furniture making skills (Beijing woodcarving small objects) vary according to different products, but can basically be completed according to the process of design, woodworking, painting, turning, chiseling, chiseling, shoveling, filing, grinding, coloring, hot waxing and lacquering.
Chinese woodblock printing technique
Woodblock printing is a special technique that uses knives to carve words or patterns on wooden boards, and then uses ink, paper, silk and other materials to print and bind books. It has a history of more than 1,300 years, more than 400 years earlier than movable type printing. It pioneered the copying technology of mankind, carries immeasurable historical and cultural information, and plays an incomparable and important role in the history of world cultural communication.
Heritage with Related Tags
Konso Cultural Landscape
The Konso Cultural Landscape is an arid heritage site in the Konso Highlands of Ethiopia, consisting of stone-walled terraces and fortified settlements. It exemplifies a living cultural tradition that has adapted to an arid and hostile environment over 21 generations (over 400 years). The landscape demonstrates the shared values, social cohesion and engineering knowledge of its communities. The site also features anthropomorphic wooden statues – grouped to represent respected members of their communities and particularly heroic events – that are living witnesses to a funerary tradition that is in danger of disappearing. Stone monuments in the town express a complex system of marking the succession of generations of leaders.
Fujisan, sacred place and source of artistic inspiration
Known worldwide as Mount Fuji, the beauty of this solitary, often snow-capped stratovolcano, towering above the sea and lakes surrounded by villages and trees, has long been a goal for pilgrims and an inspiration to artists and poets. The listed properties include 25 sites that reflect the essence of Mount Fuji's sacred and artistic landscapes. In the 12th century, Mount Fuji became a training center for ascetic Buddhism, which included elements of Shintoism. In the upper 1,500 meters of the 3,776-meter peak, pilgrimage routes and crater shrines have been listed, and sites around the base of the mountain include the Sengen Shrine, ninja lodging houses, and natural volcanic features such as lava tree molds, lakes, springs and waterfalls, which are considered sacred. Representations of Mount Fuji in Japanese art date back to the 11th century, but 19th-century woodblock prints of landscapes, including those of sandy beaches and pine forests, made Mount Fuji an internationally recognized Japanese icon and had a profound influence on the development of Western art.
The wooden pillared mosques of medieval Anatolia
The collection consists of five mosques in Anatolia, built between the late 13th and mid-14th centuries AD, in different provinces of present-day Turkey. Their structural system is distinctive: brick and stone exterior walls are combined with rows of wooden interior pillars that support wooden ceilings and roofs. These mosques are known for the skilled wood carving and craftsmanship used in the construction of their structures, architectural fittings and interiors.