3D-printing takes China's ancient grottoes to world
By Zhao E'nuo, People's
Daily
Cave
No. 12 of the Yungang Grottoes, the 1,500-year-old masterpieces of Chinese
Buddhist art located in Datong, North China's Shanxi Province, has been
recently "moved" to the Zhejiang University Museum of Art and
Archaeology in East China by 3D printing technology, bringing the grottoes to
the wider world.
The
world's first mobile 3D-printed 1:1 replica cave of the Yungang Grottoes was
recently completed in Zhejiang University and opened to the students and
faculty on June 12. (Visit https://my.matterportvr.cn/show/?m=efLVXMG77MP)
The
replica cave is jointly developed by the Cultural Heritage Research Institute
of Zhejiang University and the Yungang Grottoes Research Institute. The joint
project team has overcome technical difficulties such as data collection and
processing, structural design, block printing and coloring in the past three
years, introducing the immovable UNESCO World Heritage site to the world.
Cave No. 12, also known as the Music Cave, is 14
meters deep, 11 meters wide and 9 meters high. It was carved with rich images
of heavenly figures and musical instruments from home and abroad. These figures represented the earliest royal symphony orchestra in ancient
China and played a vital role in the history of Chinese music and dance.
Starting cooperation since August 2016, the joint
project team spent three months on laser-scanning the cave and took 55,680
photos of it. After photogrammetric calculation and 3D processing, a high-fidelity
colored 3D model was built.
The
huge cave and images of the Yungang Grottoes were carved with complex
techniques, and the complicated spatial layout of the heritages in the cave
also posed great challenges for scanning and surveying. Diao Changyu, deputy
dean of the Cultural Heritage Research Institute of Zhejiang University, noted
that the data collection of cave No. 12 has touched the technical ceiling in
this field.
The
massive high-precision 3D data collection, as well as huge analysis and
calculation always impede digital recording. According to Diao, such huge data
cannot be processed by a single software system, so the cave and images must be
divided into "blocks" based on the grotto's structure and then be
combined together.
However,
"block type" printing had no precedent or mature solution. To ensure
successful printing, a special 3D printer was tailored for the project.
What
came after 3D printing was the coloring process, during which the cultural
heritages in the cave were expected to be covered with proper materials, textures
and colors. The current 3D coloring and printing techniques were not able to
reach desired effects, so the project team opted for artificial coloring to achieve
maximum authenticity.
After
rounds of discussion, the Yungang Grottoes Research Institute decided to color
the cultural heritages based on scientific data and experts' understanding, rather
than "copying" everything from cave No. 12.
"We
must make the coloring plan under the guidance of archaeology. For instance, we
have to figure out the relation between the current colors and their previous appearance,
as well as what caused the change," said Li Zhirong, deputy dean of the Cultural
Heritage Research Institute of Zhejiang University.
To
some extent, the project team was "remaking" a grotto, Li said, who
believes the replication is indeed a restoring study. The project team
preferred bright hues which identify with the colors when the grotto was just
finished, but maintained the real grotto's weathering effects on the replica.
"We remained all effective core information related to time," Li
said.
After
eight months of coloring with mineral pigment in ancient techniques, the staff
with the Yungang Grottoes Research Institute finally completed the grand and
beautiful replica cave that covers over 900 square meters.
The
replica cave No. 12 consists of 110 two-cubic-meter blocks in six tiers, and
each of the block weighs about two tons. The blocks can be shipped by eight
standard container vehicles and assembled in one week for exhibition.
The
replica is hailed as a "walking" grotto, and a Silk Road concert hall
that never rings down the curtain. Experts believe that the completion of the
project marked technical breakthroughs and a very important step forward of
China in digital protection and inheritance of cultural heritages.
Tourists
visit the Yungang Grottoes in Datong, North China's Shanxi Province, April 6,
2019. Photo by Ren Xuefeng/People's Daily Online |
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