Exhibition showcases Yi craftsmanship

【Handicrafts & Folk Art】Time:2023-06-07      Source:China Daily      Views:196

Legu Shari and Legu Chenglong demonstrate the craftsmanship of the Yi group at the Beijing exhibition. [Photo provided to China Daily]

The first thing one notices about Legu Chenglong are the egg-shaped silver buttons on his clothes. Nine in total, the buttons were handmade by the young man himself.

The 24-year-old member of the Yi ethnic group from Xichang, a city in the mountainous Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture, Southwest China's Sichuan province, says the buttons are his finest work, and took about two weeks to finish.

When he decided to sew the buttons onto his purple coat — a traditional costume worn by Yi men — Legu Chenglong knew that people would be amazed by their beauty, and he was right.

During one Sunday afternoon, when he showed up in the centuries-old Songzhu Temple in Beijing, Legu Chenglong quickly became the focus of tourists' attention. People were intrigued by his clothes, especially his decorative silver buttons.

When he took out his tools and started to carve a piece of silver, people learned that the young man was a silversmith.

Along with his father, 69-year-old Legu Shari, Legu Chenglong joined in the latest exhibition, Hand-in-Hand Initiative, in Beijing, held from May 19 to June 16. The project is a partnership between Fendi and local artisans, and was launched in Rome in 2021, toured Tokyo in April, and has now arrived in Beijing's Songzhu Temple.

"I grew up watching my father making silver jewelry every day after school. I also helped him do some simple jobs, which allowed me to learn traditional Yi craftsmanship techniques," says Legu Chenglong, who is the 15th generation of his family to have inherited the art.

Legu Shari, handicraft inheritor of the Yi ethnic group. [Photo provided to China Daily]

Last year, Legu Shari was named by the government as a national inheritor of the craft. The silver breastplates and headdresses created by him have been collected by the Beijing Museum of Nationalities, the Sichuan Museum of Nationalities and the Liangshan Museum of Nationalities.

"My father told me lots of stories about my family's tradition of making silver products. He told me that the family had no last name in the beginning, but we were good at making silver products, which won our family the name Legu, meaning craftsmen in the Yi language," Legu Chenglong says.

The Yi group's silver-making technique involves a complex process, with silver being melted and turned into flakes or delicate filigree wires to form intricate patterns.


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