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Dough
Figurines
A 4,000-year-old Chinese folk art rarely practiced today, dough
figurine is also known as mianhua
or miansu
in Chinese.
The man who may have created the craft, Zhuge Liang, was military
strategist of the state of Shu in the Three Kingdoms era (220-280).
According to a local legend, he once tried to organize a crossing of
the Han River but the waves were so high that passage was impossible.
Advisors recommended a sacrifice of 49 human heads to calm the
waters. Not wanting to see any loss of life, Zhuge Liang
ordered 49 dough heads made, stuffed with beef and horsemeat. The ploy
successfully fooled the spirits responsible for the choppy waters and
ever since then, Zhuge has been known as the father of dough-figurine
making.
"Dough figurines have been present in Chinese culinary
culture for a long time, appearing in Tang dynasty (618-907) tombs as
sacrificial offerings," reports the Taiwan
Journal. "In addition to serving food for human consumption,
traditional Chinese banquets included a table of offerings to the gods,
composed of flowers and figurines. After the feast, the decorations
became toys for children or were thrown away."
In a 2008 article, the Taiwan
Journal profiles 74-year-old Wu Chen Su, a contemporary dough
figurine artist along with her son and husband. Their modest home is
decorated with more than 150 collections of the figurines.
"The Wus got their first taste
of dough-figurine making while operating the family bakery business.
Whenever there were festivals, people would order cakes baked in
various shapes, including pigs, fish or ducks, and leave them on the
altars as sacrificial offerings to ancestors or deities. Wu Chun-te
said that one year, his mother met a master dough-figurine maker who
visited Changhua and made an offering with a dough pig he had sculpted.
Fascinated by the realistic appearance of the porker, she convinced the
master to teach her the secrets of the craft during his stay in their
home. The man not only taught her how to take a ball of dough, squeeze
it into shapes and then assemble them to create a figure, but he shared
the recipe for making dough in the traditional manner using uncooked
glutinous rice, flour, water and a pinch of salt as an antiseptic."
Wu Chun-te leads classes in dough figurines for students aged from 5 to
96 in high schools, community centers and reform schools. He's received
invitations to demonstrate his skills in Japan, Poland,
Paraguay, Russia and the United States flooding in. "We have received
far more interest in dough-figurine making from abroad than I ever
expected," he told the Taiwan
Journal. "I genuinely believe that through traditional art,
we can help more countries learn about Taiwan and build up social
diplomacy."
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Celebrating Chinese New Year
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