- By admin
- In DunhuangArt
- 2016-05-15
4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
From Cave 17, Mogao, near Dunhuang, Gansu province, China
Tang dynasty, late 8th century AD4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
Representation of a popular sutra4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
Vimalakirti, the hero of the Vimalakirtinirdesha sutra, is a sage who though has a family and lives in a house in the town of Vaishali, manages to defeat the bodhisattvas in a debate about non-duality. Although written in India, the Vimalakirtinirdesha Sutra became especially popular in China, because filial piety - whereby sons would continue the family line and worship the ancestors - was very important, and thus the requirement of Buddhist monastic life to abandon one's family and ancestors and not produce heirs was seen as particularly difficult. Vimalakirti was an attractive figure, because though a bodhisattva, he continued to live among his family and ordinary people.4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
He is shown on the left side of this painting in a box-like curtained Chinese bed, indicating that he was sick and expected visitors. The Buddha Shakyamuni, who was preaching nearby, asked his disciples and many of the bodhisattvas each to visit Vimalakirti in turn, but they were reluctant, because they had previously been defeated by his wit.4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
Vimalakirti is shown here, typically, as a sage waving a fan to emphasise the main points of his argument. His main visitor is Manjushri, the bodhisattva of wisdom, who is also shown on the back of a sketch (see Related Objects). Another bodhisattva brings a miraculous bowl of rice that never emptied and was enough for all. On the left are the white disk of the moon and the red disk of the sun either side of a cosmological mountain rising from Vimalakirti's hand, who was able to show the concept of the relativity of space and time by calling up other universes from within his room.4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
Also visible in the foreground are a Tibetan ruler on the left and a Chinese emperor on the right. The presence of the Tibetan ruler suggests a date for the painting to the period of the Tibetan occupation of Dunhuang (AD 781-847).4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours
R. Whitfield, Art of Central Asia: The Ste-2, vol. 1 (Tokyo, Kodansha International Ltd., 1982-85)4a7Silk Road Adventure & Private Tours - Silk Road China Tours