Bodhisattvas

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Bodhisattvas are enlightened beings who have put off entering paradise in order to help others attain enlightenment. There are many different Bodhisattvas, but the most famous in China is Avalokitesvara, known in Chinese as Guanyin.

Bodhisattvas are usually depicted as less austere or inward than the Buddha. Renouncing their own salvation and immediate entrance into nirvana, they devote all their power and energy to saving suffering beings in this world. As the deity of compassion, Bodhisattvas are typically represented with precious jewelry, elegant garments and graceful postures.

 

To the left is a clay statue from Maijishan from the Northern Wei period.

 

 

 

What about this figure strikes you as being markedly different from the Buddha images you've seen?













SOME THOUGHTS

Clay Bodhisattva from Maijishan, 5th c       

Height: 142 cm (4 ft 7 in)                    source

 

 

 

 

What differences between the two figures do you observe? 

 

Does one or the other seem to better represent the idea of the Bodhisattva?

Stone relief of Bodhisattva from Yungang, 5th c.   

Height: 127 cm (4 ft 2 in)  source

Stone relief of Bodhisattva from Maijishan, 5th c.                   Height: 155 cm (5ft 1 in)       source

 

The Tang dynasty ushered in a period of growth and prosperity, during which  Buddhism flourished. Buddhist beliefs, temples, and art permeated almost all levels of Tang life. Surviving Buddhist sculpture reflects the wealth of the great Buddhist monasteries.

 

Many of these sculptures were decorated with rich, painted colors, which have faded with time. Try to imagine how these may have appeared when first made.

 

Below are two Tang Bodhisattvas, both from Dunhuang. One (left) dates to circa 700, the other (right) to circa 800.

 

Do you remember the Tang Buddha sculpture from Dunhuang (click here to review)? 

 

Do these two Tang Bodhisattvas share characteristics with the Dunhuang Tang Buddha?

 

Painted clay Bodhisattva from Dunhuang, ca. 700            Height: 143 cm (4 ft 7 in)  

       source

Painted clay Bodhisattva from Dunhuang, ca. 800                

Height: 159 cm (5 ft 3 inch)  

     source

One of these Bodhisattva figures below is an early Tang example and the other is a Sui example. 

 

Can you tell which one is the Tang example? What helps you identify it?

Stone relief of Bodhisattva    Height: 43 cm (1 ft 5 in)     source 

Painted clay Bodhisattva             Height: 258 cm (8 ft 5 in)      source 

ANSWER

 

 

 

The image of Guanyin was traditionally depicted as a young Indian prince, but during the Tang the feminine characteristics of Guanyin became more prominent. To the left and below we have four Guanyin from the Sui and Tang periods. Try and see if you can follow this transformation from the images provided.

 

 

To the left is a Sui (581-618) Guanyin.

Guanyin statue, ca. 600   

Height: 249 cm (8 ft 2 in)              source

Below are two Tang images of Guanyin. One (left) is from Fengxian Monastery at Longmen, the other (right) from Dunhuang.

 

Do you see the roots of Guanyin's manifestation as the Chinese Goddess of Mercy in these images?

Stone Guanyin at Longmen                         

Height: 13.3 cm (43 ft 7 in)                             source

Wall painting of Guanyin, 8th c. Height: 190 cm (6 ft 3 in)  source

 

After the Tang, the cult of Guanyin grew in popularity largely due to popular literature, folk stories, and artistic images. By the sixteenth century Guanyin had become a Chinese goddess figure. In some folk religions she had become independent from her Buddhist origins. 

Below are two later examples of Guanyin images. The one on the left is from the Song and the one on the right is from the Ming.

What makes these figures appear more feminine than the previous images of Guanyin?

Ming painting of Guanyin                          source

Song stone Guanyin from Majishan

(Cave 165)                           source

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