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China

Liaoning temple fresco ‘restored’ with cartoon-like paintings

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Photos from eastday.com show an original painting  and one that replaced it at the Yunjie Temple in Chaoyang, Liaoning.

Chinese authorities have “restored” ancient Buddhist frescos in a temple by painting them over with cartoon-like figures from Taoist myths, reports said on Tuesday, prompting outrage online.

It is the latest example of controversial heritage preservation in China, where many ancient structures have been destroyed in recent decades, sometimes to be replaced by replicas of the original.

The temple in Chaoyang, in the northeastern province of Liaoning, was built more than 270 years ago and the delicate original paintings had survived, albeit crumbling, until the “refurbishment”.

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The new paintings are bold, simplistic, and of completely different subjects, pictures showed.

Chinese internet users lashed out at the works on the country’s weibo microblogging sites, branding the new paintings “even worse than cartoons”.

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“As a man from Chaoyang, I sincerely feel some people’s brains were kicked by a donkey,” wrote a user with the online handle Brave Brick.

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