Envisioning Dragons and Dragon Kings

Dunhuang Foundation

Curating the Silk Roads Lecture Series

Envisioning Dragons and Dragon Kings

Jacqueline Chao, The Cecil and Ida Green Curator of Asian Art, Dallas Museum of Art

The Chinese dragon is a unique composite creature in Chinese art and culture – a symbol strongly associated with supernatural transformation, political authority, and divine will. Traditionally linked with water, rainfall, clouds and thunder since Neolithic times, early folkloric, Buddhist, Daoist and Confucian associations with the dragon further contributed to the creature’s auspicious interpretation and visualization. Featuring examples from museum collections and from the Dunhuang Cave Shrines, this talk will illuminate the unique role and representation of the Chinese dragon and dragon king in Chinese art, and explore the transformation of its painted image.

January 23, 2025

6:00-7:00 pm CST / 7:00-8:00 PM EST

Online via Zoom

Image is courtesy of Dunhuang Foundation and Dunhuang Academy

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House of the Dragons: Dragons and Their Painters in Chinese Art

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A New Look: The Dragon King of the Sea