A CARVED WOOD SCULPTURE OF AMITABHA (AMIDA NYORAI)
A CARVED WOOD SCULPTURE OF AMITABHA (AMIDA NYORAI)
A CARVED WOOD SCULPTURE OF AMITABHA (AMIDA NYORAI)
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A CARVED WOOD SCULPTURE OF AMITABHA (AMIDA NYORAI)
5 更多
A CARVED WOOD SCULPTURE OF AMITABHA (AMIDA NYORAI)

LATE HEIAN-EARLY KAMAKURA PERIOD (12TH-13TH CENTURY)

細節
40 ½ in. (102.9 cm.) high including the supporting peg
來源
Private Japanese collection
Tomoki Imadegawa Gallery, Kyoto, Japan, 13th Jan 2009
Littleton & Hennessy Asian Art, London

榮譽呈獻

Takaaki Murakami (村上高明)
Takaaki Murakami (村上高明) Vice President, Specialist and Head of Department | Korean Art

拍品專文

The sculpture represents Amitabha, known in Japanese as Amida Nyorai, Buddha of Infinite Light. The Pure Land (Jodo) tradition in Japan emphasizes the salvific powers of Amida; incantation of the Buddha’s name can invite divine intercession and devotion in life can insure rebirth in Amida’s Western Paradise. By the early eleventh century, it was increasingly believed that only the compassion of Amida could override the cycle of rise, decline and fall––the concept of mappo, meaning the end of the Law that would devolve into ten millennia of moral degradation and strife. By Japanese calculation, this would coincide with the year 1052. Devotees among the upper classes commissioned sculptures and paintings showing the arrival of Amida and attendants to welcome the spirits of the dying. Given its scale, it is likely that the figure here graced a private altar.
The figure exudes an elegant serenity characteristic of the sculptural treatments of the late 12th-13th century. Amida’s divinity is emphasized by gentle idealization. The figure is slender and delicate with robes carved in rhythmic folds. The hands are held in the vitarkamudra, the thumb and index fingers forming circles symbolic of perfection in the gesture of appeasement and teaching of the Buddha’s Law.

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