sábado, 20 de septiembre de 2014

Huoheian

Huǒhēiàn (Chinese: 火黑暗) is an ancient Chinese system of aesthetics believed to serve as the philosophical yang to fengshui's yin. It was originally described as an art of only theoretical use, although it was eventually adopted as the de facto alternative to fengshui.
Huǒhēiàn translate as "fire and darkness" in English. This name refers to a passage from the Book of Burial of Guo Pu of the Jin Dynasty:

Qi vapors in the fire, and is lost in the darkness.

Unlike fengshui, huǒhēiàn values diagonal and non-orthogonal arrangements, closed spaces, corners, dim lighting, blocked pathways, and jade statuettes of snakes (a trademark of the art).
Early practitioners of the aethetic system were considered cruel, brash, and unpleasing to human tastes in their creations. However, like the dark motifs of Gothic architecture (believed by some to be a Western analogy of sorts), huǒhēiàn grew to...

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