Chinese emperor Qin Shi Huang (chin shuh hwong) ordered the terra-cotta soldiers to be created 2,200 years ago to guard him in the afterlife. Artists sculpted the statues to look like the emperor’s real-life army. They included details like clothing, hair, and even eyelashes.
The ancient artists applied the paint over lacquer, a protective coating made from tree sap. But when archaeologists removed the first statues from the damp earth, the lacquer immediately dried out in the air. It cracked and peeled off—taking the paint with it. “Almost nothing remains on the terra-cotta surfaces,” explains Catharina Blänsdorf, an art conservationist in Germany.