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Faceless Gazes, Silent Texts: Images of Devotees and Practices of Vision in Medieval South Asia
Author Kim, Jinah (著)
Source Ars Orientalis
Volumev.46
Date2016
Pages198 - 229
PublisherFreer Gallery of Art, The Smithsonian Institution and Department of the History of Art, University of Michigan
LocationMichigan, US [密西根州, 美國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteJinah Kim, PhD (UC Berkeley, 2006), teaches South and Southeast Asian art history at Harvard University. She is the author of Receptacle of the Sacred: Illustrated Manuscripts and the Buddhist Book Cult in South Asia (University of California Press, 2013). She is currently working on a book on the history of Indian manuscript painting between 1100–1500 and its relationship to the development of Tantric vision practices. Her other research projects examine the sociopolitical history of religious iconography in South and Southeast Asia and the development of the visual vernaculars in the South Asian subcontinent.
AbstractThis essay examines the iconographic and compositional context in which the images of donors appear in stone stelae prepared in the ninth through the twelfth century, the heyday of Indian Esoteric (Tantric) Buddhism. When read together with the accompanying inscriptions, the manner in which human donor figures are represented reiterates a maṇḍalaic, hierarchical worldview and reinforces established social relations of the lived world. Taking the observation of behaviors carved on stone as a starting point for understanding performative aspects of otherwise motionless sculptures, this study suggests that specific design strategies seen in elaboration of decorative and architectural framing devices in late Buddhist images helped shape the vision practices of Indian Esoteric Buddhism described in many sādhana (lit. conjuring up a deity, adoration) texts.
Table of contentsAbstract 199
Prologue: Looking for Action in Stone 199
Scope of the Study 204
A Religious Gif 206
Images of Social Hierarchy 208
Performing Image 210
Architecture of Image, Frame of Vision 215
Epilogue: Aesthetic Response in Buddhist Art and Śṛṅgāra Rasa 219
Notes 223
ISSN05711371 (P)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3998/ars.13441566.0046.008
Hits30
Created date2023.10.26
Modified date2023.10.26



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