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Dainichi Nyorai (Enjō-ji)

The seated wooden statue of Dainichi Nyorai (木造大日如来坐像, mokuzō Dainichi Nyorai zazō) at the Shingon temple of Enjō-ji in Nara is the earliest and best-substantiated work by Japanese master sculptor Unkei. An inscription on the pedestal records that he began work on the piece in 1175 and brought it to completion the following year. The sculpture has been designated a National Treasure.[1][2][note 1] Unkei's next documented works, from the early 1180s, were commissioned by military leaders prominent in the ensuing Kamakura shogunate, for temples in eastern Japan. These works are physically more massive and powerful, as are his giant Niō at Tōdai-ji. By contrast, in this early work Unkei employed a more "gentle" or "tranquil" style.[3][4]

Dainichi Nyorai by Unkei, Enjō-ji, 1176, National Treasure

Subject edit

Dainichi Nyorai (Sanskrit: Mahāvairocana) is the central deity of Esoteric Buddhism.[5] As opposed to the "revealed teaching", understandable to the intellect of the common man, the "concealed teaching" (mikkyō) of Esoteric Buddhism offers Buddhahood and paradise on earth to the initiate, through ritual practice and the contemplation of sacred images.[5][6] According to Kūkai, the founder of the Shingon school of Esoteric Buddhism in the early ninth century, "because the secret storehouse [Mikkyō teaching] is so profound and mysterious it is difficult to manifest with brush and ink [text]. Thus it is revealed to the unenlightened by adopting the form of images. The great variety of postures and mudrās are the effect of Buddha's great compassion. With a single glance [at the images] one becomes a Buddha."[5]

Dainichi (lit. "Great Sun") is worshipped as the supreme, primordial sun Buddha and also appears as the central figure of the Five Wisdom Buddhas.[7][8] Under the syncretic doctrine of honji suijaku, the Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu was considered a manifestation of Dainichi Nyorai.[8] The term Nyorai (lit. "thus-come one") is an epithet for the enlightened Buddhas that occupy the highest rank in the Japanese Buddhist pantheon.[9] In the Mandala of the Two Realms, the principle mandala for ritual activity and contemplation in Shingon Buddhism, Dainichi Nyorai appears in the centre of both the Diamond Realm and the Womb Realm.[10] In the former, as defined by the Dainichi Sutra, Dainichi represents the "metaphysical presence that embodies reason"; in the latter, as defined by the Diamond Peak Sutra, Dainichi represents the "epistemological presence that embodies wisdom".[11]

Iconography edit

Unlike the other Buddhas, Dainichi Nyorai is typically depicted in the form of a bodhisattva, with the garments, adornments, and long hair of the nobility of ancient India.[7][12] In this image Dainichi is bare-chested, with flowing draperies hanging from the left shoulder; the head is crowned, the arms, wrists, neck, chest, and legs bejewelled; the topknot is high, with long hair resting on the right shoulder.[13] Dainichi Nyorai appears in two principal guises as denoted by the mudrā or ritual gesture formed by the hands, that of the Diamond Realm and that of the Womb Realm. Here the mudrā is that of the "knowledge fist" of the Diamond Realm, with the fingers of the right hand symbolizing the five elements penetrated by the Buddhist essence as represented by the index finger of the left hand. The gesture also symbolizes the mystic union of the material with the spiritual of yoga practice, which in Tibet and Nepal takes the form of the ecstatic Yab-Yum embrace, but in China and Japan is sublimated in this mudrā.[14][15][16]

The double round halo, one for the head attached to that for the body, represents the light emitted by the Buddha, as emphasized by the rays surrounding the lotus cushion on which the head rests.[13][17][18] In the Brahma Net Sutra, translated into Chinese in 406 and copied and expounded on imperial orders through all the provinces in mid-eighth century Japan, Dainichi Nyorai appears seated on a lotus pedestal, around which all gather to hear his teaching of the law.[19][20] Here Dainichi sits atop a six-tier lotus pedestal with alternately arranged petals.[13][21][22]

 
topknot (宝髻, hōkei)[23]
crown (宝冠, hōkan)[24]
headband (天冠台, tenkandai)[25]
urna (白毫, byakugō)[26]
elongated earlobes (福耳, fukumimi)
three grooves (三道, sandō)[27]
scarf (条帛, jōhaku)[28]
chiken-in mudrā (智拳印, chiken-in)[29]
wristlet (腕釧, wansen)[30]
robe (, mo)[13]
lotus heart (蓮肉, renniku)[31]
lotus petals (蓮弁, renben)[22]
shikinasu (敷茄子, shikinasu)[note 2][13][32]
receiving platform (受座, ukeza)[13]
downturned petals (反花, kaeribana)[33]
upper base (上框, uwagamachi)[34]
lower base (下框, shitagamachi)[34]
head nimbus (頭光, zukō)[35]
hanging hair (垂髪, suihotsu)[36]
pectoral ornament (胸飾, munekazari)[37]
body nimbus (身光, shinkō)[38]
armlet (臂釧, hisen)[39]
wheel of the law (法輪, hōrin)
string of jewels (瓔珞, yōraku)[40]
lotus position (結跏趺坐, kekka fuza)[41]

Technology edit

Approximately ninety percent of Important Cultural Property and National Treasure sculptures are made of wood.[42] All of Unkei's surviving works are in this medium.[4][43] This piece employs the joined-block technique known as yosegi-zukuri, which has the twin advantages of obviating the need for large pieces of timber while facilitating the hollowing-out process which helps reduce shrinkage and cracking.[42][44][45][46] Six main blocks of hinoki or Japanese cypress were used, two vertical blocks arranged side by side and end on for the torso and head; one horizontal piece for the legs; one for the top-knot; and two wedges for the thighs; the arms are assembled from a number of further pieces.[47] After carving, hollowing, and assembly, the statue was lacquered and covered in gold leaf.[44] The double halo and pedestal are of similar materials.[44] The eyes are of rock crystal, inserted into the open sockets from inside and held in place by bamboo pins, with painted pupils.[42][44][48] Eyes formed in this way seem to move in the guttering firelight of a temple and are one of the defining features of the sculpture of the Kamakura period that began a decade later.[48] The lips are painted red and the hair blue.[44][47] The jewels and crown are of gilt bronze.[49]

History edit

According to an inscription in black ink on the underside of the lotus heart of the pedestal, the statue was begun by Unkei, "true apprentice of great busshi Kōkei", on the twenty-fourth day of the eleventh month of 1175 and was completed on the nineteenth day of the tenth month of 1176; Unkei's fee was forty-three lengths of Hachijō-jima silk.[44][50][note 3] The Record of the shrines and temples of Yamato (和州社寺記, Washū shajiki) states that the statue was installed in the tahōtō.[44] At an uncertain date two panels were opened in the back of the head of the statue, either for repairs to the eyes or to enable the insertion of holy objects, as found in numerous other instances.[18] The statue survived the destruction of the tahōtō by fire during the Ōnin War; subsequently it was installed in the hondō.[44] In 1921 repair work was carried out, at which time the inscription was discovered.[44] The third tahōtō, erected to replace that moved to Kamakura in 1920, was constructed between 1986 and 1990.[51] In 1991 the statue was exhibited at the Kyoto National Museum.[52] Unkei's Dainichi Nyorai is now once again installed in the tahōtō, against a backdrop of painted Buddhas and vajra on the columns and wall behind the altar.[53]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The statue was designated a National Treasure in 1920, under the 1897 Ancient Temples and Shrines Preservation Law; with the 1950 Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties, the statue was redesignated an Important Cultural Property; the statue was again designated a National Treasure in 1993.
  2. ^ shikinasu may be translated literally as "bulging aubergine"
  3. ^ The inscription reads: 運慶承 安元元年十一月廿四日始之 | 給料物上品八丈絹肆拾参疋也 | 已上御身料也 | 奉渡安元弐秊丙申十月十九日 | 大仏師康慶 | 実弟子運慶 "Unkei in compliance: begun on the 24th day of the eleventh month of Angen 1 [1175] | for payment of forty-three lengths of superior quality silk cloth from Hachijō-jima | that is all as regards payment | completed and handed over in heishin [1176 per sexagenary cycle] on the 19th day of the tenth month of Angen 2 [1176] | great busshi Kōkei's | true apprentice, Unkei"

References edit

  1. ^ 木造大日如来坐像〈運慶作/〉 [Seated wooden statue of Dainichi Nyorai (by Unkei)] (in Japanese). Agency for Cultural Affairs. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  2. ^ [List of nationally designated Cultural Properties by city: Nara] (PDF) (in Japanese). Nara Prefecture. p. 15. Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2011. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  3. ^ Paine, Robert Treat; Soper, Alexander (1981). The Art and Architecture of Japan. Yale University Press. p. 110. ISBN 0300053339.
  4. ^ a b Mori Hisashi (1974). Sculpture of the Kamakura Period. Weatherhill. pp. 25–69. ISBN 9780834810174.
  5. ^ a b c Bogel, Cynthea J. (2010). With a Single Glance: Buddhist Icon and Early Mikkyō Vision. University of Washington Press. pp. 3–6. ISBN 9780295989204.
  6. ^ Sawa Takaaki (1972). Art in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism. Weatherhill. pp. 12ff. ISBN 0834810018.
  7. ^ a b "Dainichi". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  8. ^ a b Frédéric, Louis (1995). Buddhism: Flammarion Iconographic Guides. Flammarion. pp. 127–132. ISBN 2080135589.
  9. ^ "Nyorai". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  10. ^ Ten Grotenhuis, Elizabeth (1999). Japanese Mandalas. University of Hawaii Press. pp. 33–95. ISBN 0824820819.
  11. ^ Washizuka Hiromitsu; Goepper, Roger (1997). Enlightenment Embodied: the Art of the Japanese Buddhist Sculptor (7th–14th Centuries). Japan Society. pp. 20f. ISBN 0913304433.
  12. ^ Ishii Ayako (November 1998). 仏像の見方 [Viewing Buddhist Images]. Ikeda Shoten. pp. 132f. ISBN 9784262156958.
  13. ^ a b c d e f Ogawa Kōzō (1996). 魅惑の仏像 28 大日如来 : 奈良・円成寺 [Fascinating Buddha Statues 28: Dainichi Nyorai – Enjōji, Nara] (in Japanese). Mainichi Shinbunsha. p. 34. ISBN 9784620604381.
  14. ^ Saunders, Ernest Dale (1960). Mudrā: A Study of Symbolic Gestures in Japanese Buddhist Sculpture. Princeton University Press. pp. 102–7. ISBN 0691018669.
  15. ^ Getty, Alice (1914). The Gods of Northern Buddhism: their History, Iconography and Progressive Evolution through the Northern Buddhist Countries. Oxford University Press. pp. 29–33.
  16. ^ Frédéric, Louis (1995). Buddhism: Flammarion Iconographic Guides. Flammarion. pp. 46f. ISBN 2080135589.
  17. ^ "Kouhai". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  18. ^ a b Yamamoto Tsutomu (1990). 円成寺大日如来像の再検討 [Re-examination of the statue of Dainichi Nyorai at Enjōji]. Kokka (in Japanese) (1130): 7–14.
  19. ^ de Visser, M. W. (1935). Ancient Buddhism in Japan II. Brill. pp. 572–6.
  20. ^ . Young Men's Buddhist Association of America. Archived from the original on 5 March 2005. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  21. ^ . Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Archived from the original on 17 August 2014. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  22. ^ a b "Renben". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  23. ^ "Houkei". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  24. ^ "Houkan". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  25. ^ "Tenkandai". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  26. ^ "Byakugou". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  27. ^ "Sandou". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  28. ^ "Jouhaku". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  29. ^ "Chiken-in". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  30. ^ "Wansen". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  31. ^ "Renniku". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  32. ^ "Shikinasu". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  33. ^ "Kaeribana". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  34. ^ a b . Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Archived from the original on 1 November 2013. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  35. ^ "Zukou". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  36. ^ "Suihotsu". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  37. ^ "Kyoushoku". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  38. ^ "Shinkou". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  39. ^ "Hisen". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  40. ^ "Yōraku". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  41. ^ "Kekka fuza". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  42. ^ a b c Nishikawa Kyōtarō; Sano, Emily J (1983). The Great Age of Japanese Buddhist Sculpture, AD 600–1300. Japan Society. pp. 47, 50–54. ISBN 0912804084.
  43. ^ Kuno Takeshi (1974). 運慶の彫刻 [Sculptures by Unkei] (in Japanese and English). Heibonsha.
  44. ^ a b c d e f g h i Maruo Shōzaburō, ed. (1966). 日本彫刻史基礎資料集成 : 平安時代 重要作品篇 4 [Basic Data for the History of Japanese Sculpture: Heian period, Important Works IV] (in Japanese). Chūō Kōron Bijutsu Shuppan. pp. 48–51, plates pp. 59–64.
  45. ^ Washizuka Hiromitsu; Goepper, Roger (1997). Enlightenment Embodied: the Art of the Japanese Buddhist Sculptor (7th–14th Centuries). Japan Society. pp. 62–4. ISBN 0913304433.
  46. ^ "Yoseki-zukuri". Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  47. ^ a b Ogawa Kōzō (1996). 魅惑の仏像 28 大日如来 : 奈良・円成寺 [Fascinating Buddha Statues 28: Dainichi Nyorai – Enjōji, Nara] (in Japanese). Mainichi Shinbunsha. p. 44. ISBN 9784620604381.
  48. ^ a b Harris, Ken; Matsushima, Ken (1991). Kamakura: the Renaissance of Japanese Sculpture, 1185–1333. British Museum Press. p. 30. ISBN 0714114510.
  49. ^ Washizuka Hiromitsu; Goepper, Roger (1997). Enlightenment Embodied: the Art of the Japanese Buddhist Sculptor (7th–14th Centuries). Japan Society. p. 46. ISBN 0913304433.
  50. ^ 大日如来坐像 [Seated statue of Dainichi Nyorai] (in Japanese). Enjō-ji. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  51. ^ 円成寺:多宝塔 [Enjōji Tahōtō] (in Japanese). Enjō-ji. Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  52. ^ Kyoto National Museum, ed. (1991). 院政期の仏像 : 定朝から運慶へ : 特別展覧会 [Buddhist Images of the Cloistered Government, from Jōchō to Unkei: special exhibition] (in Japanese). Kyoto National Museum.
  53. ^ Ogawa Kōzō (1996). 魅惑の仏像 28 大日如来 : 奈良・円成寺 [Fascinating Buddha Statues 28: Dainichi Nyorai – Enjōji, Nara] (in Japanese). Mainichi Shinbunsha. p. frontispiece. ISBN 9784620604381.

dainichi, nyorai, enjō, seated, wooden, statue, dainichi, nyorai, 木造大日如来坐像, mokuzō, dainichi, nyorai, zazō, shingon, temple, enjō, nara, earliest, best, substantiated, work, japanese, master, sculptor, unkei, inscription, pedestal, records, that, began, work, . The seated wooden statue of Dainichi Nyorai 木造大日如来坐像 mokuzō Dainichi Nyorai zazō at the Shingon temple of Enjō ji in Nara is the earliest and best substantiated work by Japanese master sculptor Unkei An inscription on the pedestal records that he began work on the piece in 1175 and brought it to completion the following year The sculpture has been designated a National Treasure 1 2 note 1 Unkei s next documented works from the early 1180s were commissioned by military leaders prominent in the ensuing Kamakura shogunate for temples in eastern Japan These works are physically more massive and powerful as are his giant Niō at Tōdai ji By contrast in this early work Unkei employed a more gentle or tranquil style 3 4 Dainichi Nyorai by Unkei Enjō ji 1176 National Treasure Contents 1 Subject 2 Iconography 3 Technology 4 History 5 See also 6 Notes 7 ReferencesSubject editDainichi Nyorai Sanskrit Mahavairocana is the central deity of Esoteric Buddhism 5 As opposed to the revealed teaching understandable to the intellect of the common man the concealed teaching mikkyō of Esoteric Buddhism offers Buddhahood and paradise on earth to the initiate through ritual practice and the contemplation of sacred images 5 6 According to Kukai the founder of the Shingon school of Esoteric Buddhism in the early ninth century because the secret storehouse Mikkyō teaching is so profound and mysterious it is difficult to manifest with brush and ink text Thus it is revealed to the unenlightened by adopting the form of images The great variety of postures and mudras are the effect of Buddha s great compassion With a single glance at the images one becomes a Buddha 5 Dainichi lit Great Sun is worshipped as the supreme primordial sun Buddha and also appears as the central figure of the Five Wisdom Buddhas 7 8 Under the syncretic doctrine of honji suijaku the Shinto sun goddess Amaterasu was considered a manifestation of Dainichi Nyorai 8 The term Nyorai lit thus come one is an epithet for the enlightened Buddhas that occupy the highest rank in the Japanese Buddhist pantheon 9 In the Mandala of the Two Realms the principle mandala for ritual activity and contemplation in Shingon Buddhism Dainichi Nyorai appears in the centre of both the Diamond Realm and the Womb Realm 10 In the former as defined by the Dainichi Sutra Dainichi represents the metaphysical presence that embodies reason in the latter as defined by the Diamond Peak Sutra Dainichi represents the epistemological presence that embodies wisdom 11 Iconography editUnlike the other Buddhas Dainichi Nyorai is typically depicted in the form of a bodhisattva with the garments adornments and long hair of the nobility of ancient India 7 12 In this image Dainichi is bare chested with flowing draperies hanging from the left shoulder the head is crowned the arms wrists neck chest and legs bejewelled the topknot is high with long hair resting on the right shoulder 13 Dainichi Nyorai appears in two principal guises as denoted by the mudra or ritual gesture formed by the hands that of the Diamond Realm and that of the Womb Realm Here the mudra is that of the knowledge fist of the Diamond Realm with the fingers of the right hand symbolizing the five elements penetrated by the Buddhist essence as represented by the index finger of the left hand The gesture also symbolizes the mystic union of the material with the spiritual of yoga practice which in Tibet and Nepal takes the form of the ecstatic Yab Yum embrace but in China and Japan is sublimated in this mudra 14 15 16 The double round halo one for the head attached to that for the body represents the light emitted by the Buddha as emphasized by the rays surrounding the lotus cushion on which the head rests 13 17 18 In the Brahma Net Sutra translated into Chinese in 406 and copied and expounded on imperial orders through all the provinces in mid eighth century Japan Dainichi Nyorai appears seated on a lotus pedestal around which all gather to hear his teaching of the law 19 20 Here Dainichi sits atop a six tier lotus pedestal with alternately arranged petals 13 21 22 nbsp topknot 宝髻 hōkei 23 crown 宝冠 hōkan 24 headband 天冠台 tenkandai 25 urna 白毫 byakugō 26 elongated earlobes 福耳 fukumimi three grooves 三道 sandō 27 scarf 条帛 jōhaku 28 chiken in mudra 智拳印 chiken in 29 wristlet 腕釧 wansen 30 robe 裳 mo 13 lotus heart 蓮肉 renniku 31 lotus petals 蓮弁 renben 22 shikinasu 敷茄子 shikinasu note 2 13 32 receiving platform 受座 ukeza 13 downturned petals 反花 kaeribana 33 upper base 上框 uwagamachi 34 lower base 下框 shitagamachi 34 head nimbus 頭光 zukō 35 hanging hair 垂髪 suihotsu 36 pectoral ornament 胸飾 munekazari 37 body nimbus 身光 shinkō 38 armlet 臂釧 hisen 39 wheel of the law 法輪 hōrin string of jewels 瓔珞 yōraku 40 lotus position 結跏趺坐 kekka fuza 41 Technology editApproximately ninety percent of Important Cultural Property and National Treasure sculptures are made of wood 42 All of Unkei s surviving works are in this medium 4 43 This piece employs the joined block technique known as yosegi zukuri which has the twin advantages of obviating the need for large pieces of timber while facilitating the hollowing out process which helps reduce shrinkage and cracking 42 44 45 46 Six main blocks of hinoki or Japanese cypress were used two vertical blocks arranged side by side and end on for the torso and head one horizontal piece for the legs one for the top knot and two wedges for the thighs the arms are assembled from a number of further pieces 47 After carving hollowing and assembly the statue was lacquered and covered in gold leaf 44 The double halo and pedestal are of similar materials 44 The eyes are of rock crystal inserted into the open sockets from inside and held in place by bamboo pins with painted pupils 42 44 48 Eyes formed in this way seem to move in the guttering firelight of a temple and are one of the defining features of the sculpture of the Kamakura period that began a decade later 48 The lips are painted red and the hair blue 44 47 The jewels and crown are of gilt bronze 49 History editAccording to an inscription in black ink on the underside of the lotus heart of the pedestal the statue was begun by Unkei true apprentice of great busshi Kōkei on the twenty fourth day of the eleventh month of 1175 and was completed on the nineteenth day of the tenth month of 1176 Unkei s fee was forty three lengths of Hachijō jima silk 44 50 note 3 The Record of the shrines and temples of Yamato 和州社寺記 Washu shajiki states that the statue was installed in the tahōtō 44 At an uncertain date two panels were opened in the back of the head of the statue either for repairs to the eyes or to enable the insertion of holy objects as found in numerous other instances 18 The statue survived the destruction of the tahōtō by fire during the Ōnin War subsequently it was installed in the hondō 44 In 1921 repair work was carried out at which time the inscription was discovered 44 The third tahōtō erected to replace that moved to Kamakura in 1920 was constructed between 1986 and 1990 51 In 1991 the statue was exhibited at the Kyoto National Museum 52 Unkei s Dainichi Nyorai is now once again installed in the tahōtō against a backdrop of painted Buddhas and vajra on the columns and wall behind the altar 53 See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dainichi Nyorai by Unkei Enjōji List of National Treasures of Japan sculptures Kei schoolNotes edit The statue was designated a National Treasure in 1920 under the 1897 Ancient Temples and Shrines Preservation Law with the 1950 Law for the Protection of Cultural Properties the statue was redesignated an Important Cultural Property the statue was again designated a National Treasure in 1993 shikinasu may be translated literally as bulging aubergine The inscription reads 運慶承 安元元年十一月廿四日始之 給料物上品八丈絹肆拾参疋也 已上御身料也 奉渡安元弐秊丙申十月十九日 大仏師康慶 実弟子運慶 Unkei in compliance begun on the 24th day of the eleventh month of Angen 1 1175 for payment of forty three lengths of superior quality silk cloth from Hachijō jima that is all as regards payment completed and handed over in heishin 1176 per sexagenary cycle on the 19th day of the tenth month of Angen 2 1176 great busshi Kōkei s true apprentice Unkei References edit 木造大日如来坐像 運慶作 Seated wooden statue of Dainichi Nyorai by Unkei in Japanese Agency for Cultural Affairs Retrieved 30 March 2012 市町村別 国指定文化財一覧 奈良市 List of nationally designated Cultural Properties by city Nara PDF in Japanese Nara Prefecture p 15 Archived from the original PDF on 11 September 2011 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Paine Robert Treat Soper Alexander 1981 The Art and Architecture of Japan Yale University Press p 110 ISBN 0300053339 a b Mori Hisashi 1974 Sculpture of the Kamakura Period Weatherhill pp 25 69 ISBN 9780834810174 a b c Bogel Cynthea J 2010 With a Single Glance Buddhist Icon and Early Mikkyō Vision University of Washington Press pp 3 6 ISBN 9780295989204 Sawa Takaaki 1972 Art in Japanese Esoteric Buddhism Weatherhill pp 12ff ISBN 0834810018 a b Dainichi Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b Frederic Louis 1995 Buddhism Flammarion Iconographic Guides Flammarion pp 127 132 ISBN 2080135589 Nyorai Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Ten Grotenhuis Elizabeth 1999 Japanese Mandalas University of Hawaii Press pp 33 95 ISBN 0824820819 Washizuka Hiromitsu Goepper Roger 1997 Enlightenment Embodied the Art of the Japanese Buddhist Sculptor 7th 14th Centuries Japan Society pp 20f ISBN 0913304433 Ishii Ayako November 1998 仏像の見方 Viewing Buddhist Images Ikeda Shoten pp 132f ISBN 9784262156958 a b c d e f Ogawa Kōzō 1996 魅惑の仏像 28 大日如来 奈良 円成寺 Fascinating Buddha Statues 28 Dainichi Nyorai Enjōji Nara in Japanese Mainichi Shinbunsha p 34 ISBN 9784620604381 Saunders Ernest Dale 1960 Mudra A Study of Symbolic Gestures in Japanese Buddhist Sculpture Princeton University Press pp 102 7 ISBN 0691018669 Getty Alice 1914 The Gods of Northern Buddhism their History Iconography and Progressive Evolution through the Northern Buddhist Countries Oxford University Press pp 29 33 Frederic Louis 1995 Buddhism Flammarion Iconographic Guides Flammarion pp 46f ISBN 2080135589 Kouhai Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b Yamamoto Tsutomu 1990 円成寺大日如来像の再検討 Re examination of the statue of Dainichi Nyorai at Enjōji Kokka in Japanese 1130 7 14 de Visser M W 1935 Ancient Buddhism in Japan II Brill pp 572 6 Brahma Net Sutra Young Men s Buddhist Association of America Archived from the original on 5 March 2005 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Rengeza Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Archived from the original on 17 August 2014 Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b Renben Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Houkei Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Houkan Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Tenkandai Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Byakugou Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Sandou Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Jouhaku Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Chiken in Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Wansen Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Renniku Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Shikinasu Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Kaeribana Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b Kamachiza Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Archived from the original on 1 November 2013 Retrieved 30 March 2012 Zukou Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Suihotsu Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Kyoushoku Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Shinkou Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Hisen Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Yōraku Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 Kekka fuza Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b c Nishikawa Kyōtarō Sano Emily J 1983 The Great Age of Japanese Buddhist Sculpture AD 600 1300 Japan Society pp 47 50 54 ISBN 0912804084 Kuno Takeshi 1974 運慶の彫刻 Sculptures by Unkei in Japanese and English Heibonsha a b c d e f g h i Maruo Shōzaburō ed 1966 日本彫刻史基礎資料集成 平安時代 重要作品篇 4 Basic Data for the History of Japanese Sculpture Heian period Important Works IV in Japanese Chuō Kōron Bijutsu Shuppan pp 48 51 plates pp 59 64 Washizuka Hiromitsu Goepper Roger 1997 Enlightenment Embodied the Art of the Japanese Buddhist Sculptor 7th 14th Centuries Japan Society pp 62 4 ISBN 0913304433 Yoseki zukuri Japanese Architecture and Art Net Users System Retrieved 30 March 2012 a b Ogawa Kōzō 1996 魅惑の仏像 28 大日如来 奈良 円成寺 Fascinating Buddha Statues 28 Dainichi Nyorai Enjōji Nara in Japanese Mainichi Shinbunsha p 44 ISBN 9784620604381 a b Harris Ken Matsushima Ken 1991 Kamakura the Renaissance of Japanese Sculpture 1185 1333 British Museum Press p 30 ISBN 0714114510 Washizuka Hiromitsu Goepper Roger 1997 Enlightenment Embodied the Art of the Japanese Buddhist Sculptor 7th 14th Centuries Japan Society p 46 ISBN 0913304433 大日如来坐像 Seated statue of Dainichi Nyorai in Japanese Enjō ji Retrieved 30 March 2012 円成寺 多宝塔 Enjōji Tahōtō in Japanese Enjō ji Retrieved 30 March 2012 Kyoto National Museum ed 1991 院政期の仏像 定朝から運慶へ 特別展覧会 Buddhist Images of the Cloistered Government from Jōchō to Unkei special exhibition in Japanese Kyoto National Museum Ogawa Kōzō 1996 魅惑の仏像 28 大日如来 奈良 円成寺 Fascinating Buddha Statues 28 Dainichi Nyorai Enjōji Nara in Japanese Mainichi Shinbunsha p frontispiece ISBN 9784620604381 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dainichi Nyorai Enjō ji amp oldid 1212325904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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