RELIGIOUS SEMIOTICS IN PERFORMANCE AND VISUAL ART: SYMBOLISM IN ABORIGINAL DOT PAINTING, SICHUAN OPERA MAKEUP, CHINESE TRADITIONAL SCULPTURE AND SHU EMBROIDERY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.24204/ejpr.2024.4502Keywords:
Religious Semiotics, Symbolism in Art, Aboriginal Dot Painting, Sichuan Opera Makeup, Shu EmbroideryAbstract
This research aims to study art and religious philosophy by analyzing the significance of Aboriginal dot painting, Sichuan opera makeup, Chinese traditional sculpture and Shu embroidery. A particular emphasis is placed upon their crucial importance for understanding the essence of various societies as well as their main spiritual and cultural tenets. The data for this study was gathered using a qualitative approach, targeted toward online museums and cultural websites, focusing on images of artworks to determine the parameters of symbolic elements in terms of culture and religion. Purposeful sampling was used to identify pieces of art that not only have meaningful religious symbolisms but also different cultural backgrounds. Such sampling assures that the study embodies a wide representation of religious semiotics and a better understanding of the interaction between art and spirituality. This study shows that irrespective of culture, one can identify an analogy of how signs and icons work with the message from the divine, which is further preserved from the sacred. These art symbols embody theological metaphors on ethical, aesthetic, and cultural dimensions and express semantic meanings across cultures. Since the data for the study was limited to only online sources and predefined cultural artefacts, it may lack the field intensity of first-hand observation across cultures. Future research should identify multiple data sources and conduct additional cross-cultural comparisons of more cultures and other forms of art.