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LANZHOU, May 26 (Xinhuanet) -- Digital technology is
being utilized at cultural relics protection and collection institutes all over
the world to intensify the endeavors to conserve the world cultural heritage in
Dunhuang, northwest China's Gansu Province.
Dubbed "Digital Dunhuang", the
ongoing program will help pool in a virtual way all the treasures from Dunhuang,
which are scattered at different museums, libraries and research institutes
around the world, Dunhuangologists believe.
"To put it more accurately, Digital Dunhuang embraces
two categories of work," said Liu Gang, a researcher at the Dunhuang Academy in
Dunhuang, Gansu.
The first category of work is to create highly
intelligent digital images of the caves, murals, painted clay sculptures and all
cultural relics relevant to Dunhuang, and the second category is to digitize
historical records and research findings on Dunhuang and related materials and
compile them into electronic files, Liu explained.
The city of Dunhuang, located adjacent the crossroads
of the ancient Silk Road, has been made famous largely by the Buddhist Grottoes,
popularly known as the Mogao Grottoes, which are one of the world's most vital
sites of ancient Buddhist culture.
The grottoes, also famed as Caves of the Thousand
Buddhas, contain some 2,000 clay sculptures and more than 45,000 square meters
of mural paintings, which date back from the 5th to the 14th centuries.
The grand grottoes were included in the world
cultural heritagelist of the United Nations Education, Science and Culture
Organization in 1987.
Of the 735 caves, 492 still more or less remained
intact. All have been subjected to various kinds of damage or indignities to
some extent, from the long-term erosion of wind and water, to the smoke from
fires built by bivouacked troops, according to specialists from the Dunhuang
Academy.
The damages have also stemmed from the modern perils
of mass tourism, where the moisture from the breath of visiting crowds canimpair
delicate murals that have survived for centuries in a arid desert climate, the
specialists acknowledged.
The introduction of digitization technology will
upgrade conservation efforts, including tourist number control, for the
irrecoverable cultural heritage, according to specialists.
A Virtual Caves project, which constitutes part of
the Digital Dunhuang program, will allow viewers, without entering the grottoes,
to feel like they are visiting the real grottoes of amazing Buddhist art.
However, scholars are paying more attention to the
academic aspect of the use of new digital means to eternally conserve,
especially in an intact way, the magnificent cultural heritage, including
Buddhist manuscripts, painted scrolls and other historical documents.
Studies on Dunhuang were launched as early as the
year 1900, when the Dunhuang Library Cave, which had been sealed for 850 years
and held more than 50,000 relics dating from the 4th to 11th centuries, was
accidentally found by a Taoist priest.
Part of the Dunhuang relics have since been taken out
of China and acquired by collectors in Britain, France, Russia, Japan, India,
the Republic of Korea and Finland.
This early internationalism has an echo in the
contemporary distribution of Dunhuang materials and Dunhuang studies around
theworld.
But not all of the Dunhuang collections overseas are
available to researchers and common viewers. Demand for the availability among
the scholars is another key factor behind the Digital Dunhuang program.
The program in process has drawn participants from
more than a dozen organizations which possess related collections or have
interest in conservation of the cultural heritage. Included are the Dunhuang
Academy, the National Library of China based in Beijing, national libraries of
Britain and France, Russian academy of sciences and the US-based Mellon
Foundation.
The most eye-catching part of the program is said to
be the digital shooting of the Dunhuang caves, or Virtual Caves, with financial
support from the Mellon Foundation.
Starting in 1998, the shooting work, undertaken by
the Dunhuang Academy in partnership with other academic organs, including
Northwestern University of the United States, has had the measurement, shooting
and compilation of 22 caves completed and the cyber viewing schemes developed
for another 42 caves, said Li Zuixiong, vice president of the academy.
According to Liu Gang, the state-of-the-art digital
photography technology has been used for the shooting project, or Virtual Caves,
which is able to display the mural paintings that are invisible under natural
light or obstructed by structural members of the caves, including posts.
Another part of the Digital Dunhuang program, or
"Digital Dunhuang Library Cave", is also well underway, Li Zuixiong said.
Digital versions of manuscripts and painting scrolls
from the library cave now have almost every detail of the documents, which were
difficult to view under magnifiers, perceivable to researchers, noted Lin
Shitian, a specialist on rare ancient books from the National Library of China.
In mid-May, a digital Dunhuang website went into
operation in the Chinese language, which allows viewers to scan nearly 10,000
titles of digitized Dunhuang records and 300 images of mural paintings and
sculptures.
The development and application of digitization
technology, in collaboration with Internet services, are not only expected to
bring together again the scattered Dunhuang treasures, albeit in avirtual way,
but also have facilitated the expansion of the research scopes of Dunhuangology,
which has become a discipline ofworld fame, said Fan Jinshi, president of
Dunhuang Academy.
It takes both time and capital and needs more
efficient international cooperation to accomplish all the goals of the Digital
Dunhuang program, Fan said. Enditem |