Title: Medieval%20Chinese%20Buddhist%20Art
1 Medieval ChineseBuddhist Art
2Early ChineseBuddhist Sculpture
- Buddhist teachings practices spread to
China from India via trade routes along both land
and sea. Some of the most visible traces of this
spread are found along the famous silk road
that ran from the Roman Islamic empires of West
Asia all the way to China, with important side
branches descending to North India. The icons
shown here were created primarily in cave
monasteries that sprang up flourished at
important points along Chinas portion of the
silk road, from the 5th century CE onward.
Although such sculptural styles clearly
originated in Northern India, they had evolved
there only a few centuries earlier in the 2nd
century CE when Roman artisans were hired to work
for North Indian patrons. Once settled in China,
Buddhist institutions developed primarily during
the period of North/South division from the
3rd-6th centuries CE, and then consolidated their
power during the subsequent unification brought
about in the 7th century by the Tang dynasty.
3Buddha seatedon a lotus(5th CE,Wei Dynasty)
4sitting Buddha w/flaming halo(5th-6th CE,
Dunhuang Caves)
5cave monastery at Longmen (5th-7th CE)
6seated Buddhawith halo(5th CE, Longmen)
7standing Buddha bodhisattvas(6th-7th CE,
Longmen Caves)
82. Painting Sculpture in theSung Yuan
Dynasties
- After a brief period of disunity following
the fall of the Tang in 906 CE, the Sung dynasty
restored order to the Chinese empire in 960 CE.
Over the next few centuries, Neo-Confucians
increasingly criticized the emperors of this
dynasty for their policy of appeasing potential
northern invaders rather than confronting them
with military force. Yet there can be no doubt
that Song sponsorship of the arts led to a period
of brilliant intellectual artistic activity,
with talented painters and craftspeople (many of
whom developed a keen interest in realism during
this period) being richly rewarded by the
imperial court, and art academies ranking artists
according to their achievements. With the
gradual weakening of this dynasty in the 13th
century, however, Mongolian invaders under Kubla
Khan easily invaded and took over the centers of
power, installing themselves as the new Yuan
dynasty after reportedly killing half of the
population in their merciless raids. Surviving
artists, who tended to resent the military
weakness of the Song emperors for which the
Chinese had suffered to intensely, developed new
and distinct styles to distinguish themselves
from their Song predecessors. Kublai Khans
court, for its part, continued to sponsor the
arts, inviting new painters from South China who
likewise initiated new trends. The sculptures and
paintings of this section illustrate the ongoing
evolution of styles during both periods, and also
reflect the dominance of Pure Land Chan
Buddhist movements.
9temple in mountain landscape (12th CE, Song
Dynasty)
10bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (12th CE, Sung
Dynasty)
11bodhisattva Guan Yin, standing
seated(12th-13th CE, Sung Dynasty)
12bodhisattvaManjushri(14th CE, Yuan Dynasty)
13western paradise of Amitabha(14th CE,Yuan
Dynasty)
14eastern pure land of the Medicine Buddha (1319
CE)
15(Side View)
16(Close Up)
17Bodhidharma, patriarch of Chan tradition (14th
CE)
183. Icons Images inNeo-Confucian Tradition
- Developments in Buddhist art architecture
were preceded, for almost a thousand years, by
important developments in Confucian tradition,
which beginning in the 2nd century BCE became the
official ideology of the Chinese empire, a
position which it retained until the early 20th
CE. As in considering the impact of Islamic art
on Indian culture previously dominated by
Buddhist Hindu influences, it is important to
look at a few examples of the way Confucian art
(and especially the neo-Confucian forms that
became increasingly influential in the 11th
12th centuries CE) differed from Buddhist art.
Like Muslims, Confucians almost without exception
avoided iconic depictions, though for slightly
different reasons Confucians regarded popular
iconic representations of divine powers as
distractions, which kept people from seeking the
cultivation of jen (human-heartedness) within
themselves. This section presents a few striking
examples of Neo-Confucian art architecture,
which reflect the central place of written
classics and honoring human ancestors in
Confucian tradition.
19stone carving of a Confucian classic (8th CE)
20Confucian temple (15th-16th CE, Ming Dynasty)
21vase with pomegranate(symbol of fertility
longevity)(late 17th CE)
22painting of Confucius(1743,Qing Dynasty)