Xiaoxitian
Xiaoxitian, or the Thousand Buddha Monastery, in Xixian county was built in the late Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) atop a mountain resembling the shape of a phoenix. Constructed along the mountain's contours, it contains various two-story buildings arranged amid winding paths. Its northern library houses more than 7,000 volumes of Ming Dynasty Buddhist scriptures. Another highlight of Xiaoxitian is its 170-square-meter main hall that houses nearly 2,000 painted sculptures. These gilded statues of Buddhist figures, landscapes, architecture, plants and animals, the largest being 3 meters tall and the smallest as tiny as a thumb, demonstrate maximalist, luxurious aesthetics reminiscent of nirvana.
Cultural Exchange
Shanghai tea salon in London brews cultural ties
Intangible Cultural Heritage
Chinese people at home and abroad bond together in ritual ceremony