This thesis examines the relationships between image and text in paintings of Chan Buddhist figural subjects from thirteenth and fourteenth century China. Its central contention is that the visual qualities of these paintings, and the lexical content of the inscriptions upon them, made complex allusions to narrative prototypes recorded in hagiographies, as part of the pedagogical practice of the Chan tradition. These narrative allusions communicated religious teachings to the viewer, mediating their relationship to the Chan pantheon of exemplars and eccentrics. This thesis' analysis of the connections between painters, inscribers, subjects and viewers of Chan figure paintings addresses an under researched dimension of thirteenth and fourteenth century Chinese visual culture. By focusing on the Chinese context for the creation and reception of Chan figure paintings, the following discussion offers an alternative to the recurrent framing of these works as precursors to Japanese Zen painting. Instead, this thesis focuses on the distinctive agency of narrative in the reception of these works in a thirteenth and fourteenth century Chinese context. This is explored in six chapters, outlined below. Chapter one surveys modern scholarship on Chan figure painting, problematising its frequent conflation with Japanese Zen art. Chapters two, three and four examine three different narrative themes in Chan figure painting: transitions, interactions, and awakenings. These three chapters show how these visual narrative themes respectively reflected and reinforced the legitimacy, authority and efficacy of Chan's lineages and teachings. The fifth chapter explores the role of inscriptions upon paintings in shaping the Song and Yuan ideal of a Chan abbot, through a case study encomia on Chan figure paintings by Yanxi Guanwen (1189-1263). The final chapter examines the idealisation of the preeminent painter of Chan figural subjects, Liang Kai (late 12-early 13th century), distinguishing between the historic receptions of his attributions in Chinese and Japanese collections.
目次
TABLE OF CONTENTS VOLUME ONE DECLARATION .................................................................................................. 2 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS...................................................................................... 3 ABSTRACT ........................................................................................................ 5 TABLE OF CONTENTS......................................................................................... 6 ABBREVIATIONS ............................................................................................... 9 TRANSLATION AND TRANSLITERATION............................................................. 10 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................. 11 CHAPTER ONE PROBLEMATISING THE CONFLATION OF CHAN AND ZEN VISUAL CULTURE...... 20 Chan and Zen in Okakura Kakuzō’s Narrative of Asian Art History ........... 24 The Aesthetic Theories of D.T. Suzuki and Shin’ichi Hisamatsu .................. 31 Japan’s Register of National Treasures........................................................ 46 Conclusions ................................................................................................... 50 CHAPTER TWO TRANSITIONS: NARRATIVES OF LEGITIMACY.................................................... 51 Śākyamuni Emerging from the Mountains .................................................... 52 Polychrome Śākyamuni Emerging from the Mountains.............................. 56 A Chan Account of the Life of the Buddha.................................................. 63 Monochrome Śākyamuni Emerging from the Mountains............................ 66 Bodhidharma Crossing the Yangzi on a Reed............................................... 77 Hagiographies of Bodhidharma.................................................................. 81 Selected Paintings of Bodhidharma Crossing the Yangzi on a Reed.......... 84 A Yuan Imperial Encomium from the Shaolin Monastery .......................... 92 Conclusions ................................................................................................... 99 CHAPTER THREE INTERACTIONS: NARRATIVES OF AUTHORITY................................................... 102 7 Classifications for Chan Figure Paintings of Interaction............................. 105 Bodhidharma and the Second Patriarch ....................................................... 109 The Rebirth of the Monk Yuanze ................................................................... 120 Yuanze’s Meeting the Pregnant Woman ..................................................... 124 Li Yuan Reunited with the Reborn Yuanze.................................................. 131 Conclusions ................................................................................................... 141 CHAPTER FOUR AWAKENINGS: NARRATIVES OF EFFICACY ....................................................... 144 Xiangyan Zhixian: Awakening Through Sound............................................. 149 Yushanzhu: Awakening Through a Blow to the Body ................................... 159 Dongshan Liangjie: Awakening Through the Sight of His Reflection .......... 170 Conclusions ................................................................................................... 177 CHAPTER FIVE YANXI GUANGWEN’S ENCOMIA: SPEAKING FOR ICONS .................................... 180 Yanxi Guangwen’s Epitaph and the Prefaces to His Discourse Record ......... 183 Yaoshan Weiyan Meeting with Li Ao............................................................... 189 Budai and Fenggan.......................................................................................... 199 Conclusions......................................................................................................