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Hairy Monkeys
2006/01/01
Edited by Hellen Zhou
Photos by Si Xiaojian
With an air of charming naivety, the hairy monkeys are
enormously popular among old Beijingers. However, for various
reasons, the folk art is facing extinction, as in today's
Beijing, only several artists are well acquainted with the
techniques of making hairy monkeys.
The creation of hairy monkeys was quite an accident. In the
Reign of Emperor Tongzhi (1862-1874), there was a drug store
named "South Qingren Hall." One day, two assistant chemists in
the store, while fiddling with some Chinese medicine, worked
out a small monkey-like toy with a shed cicada skin, a hairy
white magnolia bud, a bletilla striata (the stem of a kind of
plant) and an akebi (another kind of plant).
Their accidental creation caught the attention of the
shopkeeper, who then suggested selling the four Chinese
medicines in a pack as raw materials for making such toys.
Hairy monkeys then became popular as a folk handicraft.
Though the raw materials are quite simple, the artists are
capable of designing exquisite patterns through their
observation and perceptual knowledge of a wide range of images.
By using the hairy magnolia bud as the body, and adhering the
head and claws cut from the cicada to it, they can create
artworks of various kinds of shapes and postures.
Modeled on human actions and scenes from daily life, the
handicrafts vividly represent urban life and customs, like
barbers, fortune-tellers, hawkers of sugarcoated haws on a
stick and so on. Some of the handicrafts form a complete set of
artworks, such as "The County Magistrate on Inspection," and
"Marriage Series," which were sometimes available at the stalls
of temple fair. In recent years, additional creations of this
handicraft, which, while sticking to the traditional subjects,
also reflects the real modern life.
Jiang Shouyu started creating hairy monkeys some 20 years ago.
His works feature a careful observation to common life and
innovative ideas. To welcome the Beijing Olympic Games, he made
a sport series featuring sportsmen of weight-lifting, javelin,
gymnastics, wrestling, boxing, football and basketball in front
of the Tian'anmen Square. Want to know more? Contact: lastword@btmbeijing.com.