In the morning, I went to the Fahai Temple in the west of Beijing with my parents to have a glimpse of the frescoes of the Ming Dynasty. It was hard to accept the preaching style imposed by the lecturer, so I had to check some video and text materials after the visit. The original Fahai Temple is a key unit of national cultural relics approved by Sanxingdui and Yuanmingyuan in the same year, "first there are white pine, then there are Fahai Temple", two white pine stands in the Liao and Jin Dynasties, has gone through millennia. The murals were painted by more than a dozen palace artists 600 years ago. Although there were few visits to the murals, the court paintings emphasized rules rather than personality, and the same feeling was felt on the spot. The scene was dark, and I watched the white yarn of Shuiyue Guanyin, the snowflakes of 48 golden lines and the capillaries on the fox's ears through video. The figures in the north wall "Emperor's Buddhist Picture of Brahman" are lifelike, with broken skin and beautiful decorations of clothes and ornaments. In 1933, German photographers took a picture of the Fahai Temple, which was not damaged by the Cultural Revolution. It is said that the damaged Buddha statues are as beautiful as murals. Next time, if you have a chance, you have to make an appointment with a friend who knows these Buddhist allusions, so that you can have a deeper understanding.