Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - Clay sculpture course for male prostitutes

Clay sculpture course for male prostitutes

The clay sculpture making tutorial for male prostitutes is as follows:

First, prepare the materials.

Making powder mud: a small amount of red+white, fully knead to make male prostitute's ears.

The body of a prostitute is made of yellow and white clay.

The headdress of a prostitute is made of red soil.

The armor of a prostitute is made of blue clay.

Finally, the prostitute's face is made of black and pink clay.

Ultra-light clay sculpture of male prostitutes.

Male prostitute is a local traditional handicraft in Beijing, which belongs to children's toys that should be in season during the Mid-Autumn Festival. Every Mid-Autumn Festival, Beijingers worship "male prostitutes".

This custom originated in the Ming Dynasty. After the "male prostitute" turned into a children's Mid-Autumn Festival toy. Some people portray a "male prostitute" as a warrior wearing a golden helmet and shining armor, some riding lions and elephants, some carrying paper flags or umbrellas on their backs, or sitting or standing, which is pleasing to the eye. ?

According to the statement that there is a Jade Rabbit of Chang 'e in the Moon Palace, the Jade Rabbit is further artistically personified and even deified, and made into various forms of male prostitutes with mud. Since the Ming and Qing Dynasties, the Moon Palace Jade Rabbit gradually broke away from the attachment of the moon worship, and formed an independent image in the ceremony of offering sacrifices to the moon, and gradually enriched it.

Male prostitutes have both sacred and secular characteristics, and they have both sacrificial and recreational functions. Nowadays, male prostitutes have become one of the most representative intangible cultural heritages in Beijing.