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{{Short description|Subject in East Asian Buddhist art and poetry}} |
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[[File:Liang Kai-Shakyamuni Emerging from the Mountains.jpg|thumb|Liang Kai, ''Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism'', Southern Song Dynasty (Chinese), 13th century, hanging scroll, ink and color on silk, 118.4 x 52.0 cm, Tokyo National Museum.]] |
[[File:Liang Kai-Shakyamuni Emerging from the Mountains.jpg|thumb|Liang Kai, ''Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism'', Southern Song Dynasty (Chinese), 13th century, hanging scroll, ink and color on silk, 118.4 x 52.0 cm, [[Tokyo National Museum]].]] |
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'''''Shussan Shaka''''' ([[Japanese language|Japanese]]: 出山釈迦 ''shussan shaka''; [[Chinese language|Chinese]]: 出山釋迦 ''chūshān shìjiā''; [[English language|English]]: '''Śākyamuni Descending from the Mountain''')<ref>In English there are many variant titles, with "emerging", "mountains", different diacriticals and prepositions, and so on.</ref> is a subject in East Asian [[Buddhist art]] and poetry, in which [[Gautama Buddha|Śākyamuni Buddha]] returns from six years of asceticism in the mountains, having realized that ascetic practice is not the path to [[Enlightenment in Buddhism|enlightenment]].<ref name="Brinker 1973">{{Cite journal|last=Brinker|first=Helmut|date=1973|title=Shussan Shaka in Sung and Yüan Painting|jstor=4629268|journal=Ars Orientalis|volume=9|pages=21–40}}</ref> The story of ''Shussan Shaka'' is an important subject in painting from both China and Japan,<ref name="Brinker 1997">{{Cite book|title=Zen: Masters of Meditation in Images and Writing|last1=Brinker|first1=Helmut|last2=Kanazawa|first2=Hiroshi|publisher=Artibus Asiae|year=1997|location=Zurich|pages=131–135|chapter=Themes and Genres of Zen Painting: The Historical Buddha Sakyamuni}}</ref> but rarely or never found in [[Buddhist art]] outside of [[East Asia]], where a mountain retreat is not part of the story of this part of the Buddha's life. |
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According to the story, Śākyamuni, after leaving his palace, retreated into the mountains to seek enlightenment.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> Accompanied by five other ascetics, he meditated and fasted to a severe extent, his body becoming thin and emaciated.<ref name="Pal 1984">{{Cite book|title=Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art|last=Pal|first=Pratapaditya|publisher=Los Angeles County Museum of Art|year=1984|editor-last=Pal|editor-first=Pratapaditya|location=Los Angeles|pages=37–128|chapter=The Legendary Life of Buddha Sakyamuni}}</ref> After six years, Sujata, a young girl, gave Śākyamuni a quantity of milk rice, which he ate.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> Once he made this decision to end his fast, the five people practicing asceticism with him were disappointed and left him.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> So, a solitary Śākyamuni descended the mountain, left the life of extreme austerity behind him, and traveled instead to [[Gaya, India|Gaya]], the city that would become known as the famous site of his enlightenment under the [[Bodhi Tree|bodhi tree]].<ref name="Pal 1984" /> |
According to the story, Śākyamuni, after leaving his palace, retreated into the mountains to seek enlightenment.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> Accompanied by five other ascetics, he meditated and fasted to a severe extent, his body becoming thin and emaciated.<ref name="Pal 1984">{{Cite book|title=Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art|last=Pal|first=Pratapaditya|publisher=Los Angeles County Museum of Art|year=1984|editor-last=Pal|editor-first=Pratapaditya|location=Los Angeles|pages=37–128|chapter=The Legendary Life of Buddha Sakyamuni}}</ref> After six years, [[Sujata (milkmaid)|Sujata]], a young girl, gave Śākyamuni a quantity of milk rice, which he ate.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> Once he made this decision to end his fast, the five people practicing asceticism with him were disappointed and left him.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> So, a solitary Śākyamuni descended the mountain, left the life of extreme austerity behind him, and traveled instead to [[Gaya, India|Gaya]], the city that would become known as the famous site of his enlightenment under the [[Bodhi Tree|bodhi tree]].<ref name="Pal 1984" /> |
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As a |
As a subject in art, ''Shussan Shaka'' is distinctive in its emphasis on the humanity of the historical Buddha,<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> who in this and some other East Asian subjects is often given a beard, and a realistic, rather thin and dishevelled appearance, in contrast to traditional depictions of the [[Buddha in art]].<ref>Pal (1984), 19</ref> Key interpretive debates about paintings on this theme pivot on the question of whether the artist portrays Śākyamuni as enlightened or not.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> |
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== Origins == |
== Origins == |
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=== Emergence in China === |
=== Emergence in China === |
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Since different Buddhist traditions have different beliefs about Śākyamuni's journey to enlightenment, there is no universal version of the biography of the |
Since different Buddhist traditions have different beliefs about Śākyamuni's journey to enlightenment, there is no universal version of the biography of the historical Buddha.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> The story of ''Shussan Shaka'' is not present in traditional [[Mahayana|Mahayana Buddhist]] texts or artwork, indicating that this part of Śākyamuni's biography was a [[Chan Buddhism|Chan Buddhist]] innovation of the tenth century.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> While reference to Śākyamuni's six years of asceticism is present in the ''[[Buddhacarita]],'' no mountain locale is mentioned in that text,<ref name="Pal 1984" /> and indeed the traditional locations for Śākyamuni's life after [[Great Renunciation|the Great Departure]] are all broadly in the [[Indo-Gangetic plain]], although the [[Vulture Peak]] in the [[Rajgir Hills]] in [[Bihar]] was a favourite place in his later life. The mountain setting was likely of Chinese origin because in [[Chinese Buddhism]], [[Taoism|Daoism]], and [[Confucianism]] alike, mountains are believed to be holy places,<ref name="Pal 1984" /> and Daoist sages in particular often retreated to mountains for meditation.<ref>Pal (1984), 19</ref> |
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''Shussan Shaka'' was popularized as a |
''Shussan Shaka'' was popularized as a subject in painting in the thirteenth century during the Chinese [[Song dynasty|Song Dynasty]] (960–1279),<ref name="Zainie 1978">{{Cite journal|last=Zainie|first=Carla M.|date=September 1978|title=Sources for Some Early Japanese Ink Paintings|jstor=25159592|journal=The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art|volume=65|issue=7 |pages=237}}</ref> the period during which Chan reached its height in China.<ref name="Kuwayama 1984">{{Cite book|author1-link=George Kuwayama|title=Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art|last=Kuwayama|first=George|publisher=Los Angeles County Museum of Art|year=1984|editor-last=Pal|editor-first=Pratapaditya|location=Los Angeles|pages=165–174}}</ref> It became a particularly prevalent feature of paintings produced in the Chan temples of [[Zhejiang Province]].<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> The artist credited with initiating this motific tradition is the Northern Song literatus [[Li Gonglin]] (1049–1106).<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Though not extant, Li Gonglin's ''Shussan Shaka'' is referenced in inscriptions on other ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings, which have led scholars to this conclusion.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Li's painting style involved fine lines and precise brushwork.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> In general, Chinese paintings of ''Shussan Shaka'' followed one of two styles: the first was the traditional Chinese style that featured color, thin outlines, and detailed depictions of figure and landscape, while the second was the characteristically Zen style of monochrome painting, thicker lines with a 'spontaneous' quality, and fewer landscape elements.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> The former was the earlier style, common in the Song Dynasty, while into the [[Yuan dynasty|Yuan Dynasty]] (1271–1368) it was the latter style that prevailed.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> |
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=== Transmission to Japan === |
=== Transmission to Japan === |
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[[File:Sword Guard (Tsuba) MET LC-29 100 984-005.jpg|thumb|Japanese [[tsuba]] (sword guard), [[Edo Period]]]] |
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Chan Buddhism was transmitted from China to Japan (where it is known as Zen) during the thirteenth century, along with the unique styles and motifs of the Chan painting tradition.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Art of Japan: Paintings, Prints and Screens: Selected Articles from Orientations |
Chan Buddhism was transmitted from China to Japan (where it is known as Zen) during the thirteenth century, along with the unique styles and motifs of the Chan painting tradition.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Art of Japan: Paintings, Prints and Screens: Selected Articles from Orientations 1984–2002|last=Brinker|first=Helmut|publisher=Orientations Magazine Ltd.|year=2002|location=Hong Kong|pages=195–204|chapter=Zen Masters in Words and Images}}</ref> For example, in the fourteenth century, the famous ''Shussan Shaka'' by Chinese painter [[Liang Kai]] (ca. 1140-ca. 1210) was transported by Zen monks to Japan, where it inspired later Japanese paintings.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Hence, early Japanese renditions of ''Shussan Shaka'' were based closely on Chinese models.<ref name="Poster 1984">{{Cite book|title=Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art|last=Poster|first=Amy G.|publisher=Los Angeles County Museum of Art|year=1984|editor-last=Pal|editor-first=Pratapaditya|location=Los Angeles|pages=183–250|chapter=The Buddha Image in Japan}}</ref> Since Japanese priests were often the ones transporting paintings back to their home country, Chinese ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings often ended up in Japanese monasteries, and subsequent copies or imitations were created in monastery ateliers.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> In Japan, ''Shussan Shaka'' became particularly associated with the [[Rinzai school|Rinzai]] sect of Zen Buddhism and saw more prolonged popularity as a painting subject than in China, even into the [[Edo period|Edo Period]].<ref name="Graham 2007">{{Cite book|title=Faith and Power in Japanese Buddhist Art, 1600–2005|url=https://archive.org/details/faithpowerjapane00grah|url-access=limited|last=Graham|first=Patricia J.|publisher=University of Hawaii Press|year=2007|location=Honolulu|pages=[https://archive.org/details/faithpowerjapane00grah/page/n139 127]–149|chapter=Professional Icon-Makers}}</ref> In Japan, unlike in China, this Zen painting motif was on rare occasions translated to other forms of art, such as print illustration and sculpture.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> |
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== Significance == |
== Significance == |
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=== Role in Early Chan/Zen === |
=== Role in Early Chan/Zen === |
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Though part of a broader tradition in Buddhist art and literature across Asia of depicting Śākyamuni during his years of asceticism, the story of ''Shussan Shaka'' in particular is unique to Zen.<ref name="Cummings 1982">{{Cite book|title=The Lives of the Buddha in the Art and Literature of Asia|last=Cummings|first=Mary|publisher=University of Michigan Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies|year=1982|location=Ann Arbor|pages=153–161|chapter=Austerities}}</ref> Typically, Zen spurned iconographic depictions of Buddhist deities as seen in the art of other sects.<ref name="Kuwayama 1984" /> However, early Zen placed great emphasis on the centrality of Śākyamuni Buddha, whose role had |
Though part of a broader tradition in Buddhist art and literature across Asia of depicting Śākyamuni during his years of asceticism, the story of ''Shussan Shaka'' in particular is unique to Zen.<ref name="Cummings 1982">{{Cite book|title=The Lives of the Buddha in the Art and Literature of Asia|last=Cummings|first=Mary|publisher=University of Michigan Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies|year=1982|location=Ann Arbor|pages=153–161|chapter=Austerities}}</ref> Typically, Zen spurned iconographic depictions of Buddhist deities as seen in the art of other sects.<ref name="Kuwayama 1984" /> However, early Zen placed great emphasis on the centrality of Śākyamuni Buddha, whose role had become downplayed in recent Mahayana Buddhism.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> This emphasis was tied to the task of establishing an authoritative Zen patriarchal lineage traceable all the way back to the historical Buddha.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Hence, according to Helmut Brinker and Hiroshi Kanazawa, the chief function of the motif of ''Shussan Shaka'' is to demonstrate "Śākyamuni's role as earthly religion founder."<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> For this reason, portrayals of Śākyamuni descending the mountain after asceticism generally call viewers' attention to the human frailty of this important figure, grounding him in the earthly as opposed to deifying him.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Śākyamuni appears starved and tired, his body is gaunt and bony, and his face may bear a dismayed expression.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> He is also commonly depicted as a monk.<ref name="Poster 1984" /> |
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In addition to its relevance to lineage claims, ''Shussan Shaka'' also reflects important beliefs and practices of the Zen religious tradition.<ref name="Cummings 1982" /> For instance, Śākyamuni's weariness as he walks down from the mountain suggests that enlightenment does not come easily.<ref name="Cummings 1982" /> The solitariness of Śākyamuni's descent reflects Zen teaching about the importance of individual spirituality and solitary meditation.<ref name="Poster 1984" /> At the same time, his return to society after retreating to the mountains may also suggest that self-realization is fostered by living in community with others.<ref name="Cummings 1982" /> That Śākyamuni's hands are always concealed by the folds of his robe rather than forming a [[mudra]] resonates with the Zen Buddhist virtue of wordlessness.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Finally, the narrative of the story itself in conjunction with artists' emphasis on earthliness suggests, in accordance with Zen teaching, that enlightenment is not found by completely cutting off oneself from the world.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
In addition to its relevance to lineage claims, ''Shussan Shaka'' also reflects important beliefs and practices of the Zen religious tradition.<ref name="Cummings 1982" /> For instance, Śākyamuni's weariness as he walks down from the mountain suggests that enlightenment does not come easily.<ref name="Cummings 1982" /> The solitariness of Śākyamuni's descent reflects Zen teaching about the importance of individual spirituality and solitary meditation.<ref name="Poster 1984" /> At the same time, his return to society after retreating to the mountains may also suggest that self-realization is fostered by living in community with others.<ref name="Cummings 1982" /> That Śākyamuni's hands are always concealed by the folds of his robe rather than forming a [[mudra]] resonates with the Zen Buddhist virtue of wordlessness.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Finally, the narrative of the story itself in conjunction with artists' emphasis on earthliness suggests, in accordance with Zen teaching, that enlightenment is not found by completely cutting off oneself from the world.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
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=== Interpretive Debates === |
=== Interpretive Debates === |
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[[File:MET DP-13283-004.jpg|thumb|Japanese book illustratiion, 1809]] |
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In interpreting Chinese and Japanese paintings of ''Shussan Shaka'', a key question for scholars is whether the Śākyamuni depicted is the already enlightened Buddha or simply a man disillusioned with austerities but yet to become the "enlightened one."<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Among scholars, two opposing schools of thought persist on this issue.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> However, Zen adherents tend to favor the former view: that Śākyamuni attained enlightenment during his time in the mountains.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> This would suggest that Śākyamuni is portrayed as a [[bodhisattva]], forestalling nirvana and descending from the mountain to assist others on the path to enlightenment.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> In light of this reading, Śākyamuni's subsequent meditation and what is conventionally understood as his enlightenment under the bodhi tree at Gaya then also poses an interpretive challenge to scholars.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
In interpreting Chinese and Japanese paintings of ''Shussan Shaka'', a key question for scholars is whether the Śākyamuni depicted is the already enlightened Buddha or simply a man disillusioned with austerities but yet to become the "enlightened one."<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Among scholars, two opposing schools of thought persist on this issue.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> However, Zen adherents tend to favor the former view: that Śākyamuni attained enlightenment during his time in the mountains.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> This would suggest that Śākyamuni is portrayed as a [[bodhisattva]], forestalling nirvana and descending from the mountain to assist others on the path to enlightenment.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> In light of this reading, Śākyamuni's subsequent meditation and what is conventionally understood as his enlightenment under the bodhi tree at Gaya then also poses an interpretive challenge to scholars.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
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Although ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings indeed present viewers with the emaciated frame of a distinctly human Śākyamuni, the question of enlightenment is complicated by the presence in some paintings of symbols and iconography indicating holiness.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> Some artists paint Śākyamuni with a halo, an [[Ushnisha|uṣṇīṣa]], or an [[urna]], each of which may signify enlightenment.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> In Japanese ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings, the baldness on top of Śākyamuni's head can also represent an uṣṇīṣa.<ref name="Poster 1984" /> Most Chinese ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings do not feature a halo, which scholars therefore understand as primarily a Japanese innovation.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Apart from the use of religious symbols, poetic inscriptions also animate discussions on the enlightened status of Śākyamuni in a given painting.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> For instance, according to Helmut Brinker, the following colophon by the Zen master [[Zhongfeng Mingben]] ( |
Although ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings indeed present viewers with the emaciated frame of a distinctly human Śākyamuni, the question of enlightenment is complicated by the presence in some paintings of symbols and iconography indicating holiness.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> Some artists paint Śākyamuni with a halo, an [[Ushnisha|uṣṇīṣa]], or an [[urna]], each of which may signify enlightenment.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> In Japanese ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings, the baldness on top of Śākyamuni's head can also represent an uṣṇīṣa.<ref name="Poster 1984" /> Most Chinese ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings do not feature a halo, which scholars therefore understand as primarily a Japanese innovation.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Apart from the use of religious symbols, poetic inscriptions also animate discussions on the enlightened status of Śākyamuni in a given painting.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> For instance, according to Helmut Brinker, the following colophon by the Zen master [[Zhongfeng Mingben]] (1263–1323) suggests an interpretation of ''Shussan Shaka'' as an enlightened Buddha returning to the world to spread his wordless teaching: |
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[[File:MET 10 211 2355 O1 sf.jpg|thumb|19th-century wood [[netsuke]]]] |
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⚫ | {{Quote|text=He who emerges from the mountains and has entered the mountains:<br/>That is originally You.<br/>If one calls him "You"<br/>It still is not he.<br/>The venerable master Shijia (Śākyamuni) comes.<br/>Ha, ha, ha...! He glances over ten million miles of billows.<br/>Huanzhu Mingben salutes with respectfully folded hands.<br/>|sign=|source=Zhongfeng Mingben<ref name="Brinker 1973" />}} |
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⚫ | While some Zen masters' inscriptions situate them in the same camp as Mingben, Brinker suggests that still others favor the alternative reading of ''Shussan Shaka'' as a portrait of a man still seeking self-realization, or at least to cast doubt on the completeness of his enlightenment.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> One example is the following colophon by Songyuan Chongyo (1132–1202): |
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⚫ | {{Quote|text=He who emerges from the mountains and has entered the mountains:<br>That is originally You.<br>If one calls him "You"<br>It still is not he.<br>The venerable master Shijia (Śākyamuni) comes.<br>Ha, ha, ha...! He glances over ten million miles of billows.<br>Huanzhu Mingben salutes with respectfully folded hands.<br>|sign=|source=Zhongfeng Mingben<ref name="Brinker 1973" />}} |
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⚫ | {{Quote|text=At midnight he passed over the city wall<br/>With the beauty of a dragon and the air of a phoenix.<br/>He got loose from foolery and let go silliness.<br/>[But] the Honorable [Śākyamuni] was not aware of it.<br/>The day he came out of the mountains [because] he<br/>could no [longer] bear hunger and cold,<br/>He forcibly spoke of the six years as the time of completing his way.<br/>|sign=|source=Songyuan Chongyo<ref name="Brinker 1973" />}} |
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⚫ | While some Zen masters' inscriptions situate them in the same camp as Mingben, Brinker suggests that still others favor the alternative reading of ''Shussan Shaka'' as a portrait of a man still seeking self-realization, or at least to cast doubt on the completeness of his enlightenment.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> One example is the following colophon by Songyuan Chongyo ( |
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⚫ | {{Quote|text=At midnight he passed over the city wall<br>With the beauty of a dragon and the air of a phoenix.<br>He got loose from foolery and let go silliness.<br>[But] the Honorable [Śākyamuni] was not aware of it.<br>The day he came out of the mountains [because] he<br>could no [longer] bear hunger and cold,<br>He forcibly spoke of the six years as the time of completing his way.<br>|sign=|source=Songyuan Chongyo<ref name="Brinker 1973" />}} |
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== In Chinese Painting == |
== In Chinese Painting == |
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=== Liang Kai's ''Shussan Shaka'' === |
=== Liang Kai's ''Shussan Shaka'' === |
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[[File:Sakyamuni Emerging from the Mountains 釋迦出山圖.jpg|thumb|Traditionally attributed to Hu Zhifu, ''Śākyamuni Emerging from the Mountains'', Southern Song Dynasty, mid 13th century, hanging scroll, ink on paper, 92 x 31.7 cm, Freer Gallery of Art.|529x529px]]Liang Kai's ''Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism'' is one of the oldest extant ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings, and the most famous.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Produced under the patronage of [[Emperor Ningzong]] or [[Emperor Lizong]],<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> it is a classic example of a ''Shussan Shaka'' in the Chinese orthodox style.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> There is no inscription on this painting other than the artist's signature,<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> which identifies him as "Painter-in-Attendance" at the Imperial Academy.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
[[File:Sakyamuni Emerging from the Mountains 釋迦出山圖.jpg|thumb|Traditionally attributed to Hu Zhifu, ''Śākyamuni Emerging from the Mountains'', Southern Song Dynasty, mid 13th century, hanging scroll, ink on paper, 92 x 31.7 cm, Freer Gallery of Art.|529x529px]] |
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Liang Kai's ''Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism'', from the first half of the 13th century and now in the [[Tokyo National Museum]], is one of the oldest extant ''Shussan Shaka'' paintings, and the most famous.<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> Produced under the patronage of [[Emperor Ningzong]] or [[Emperor Lizong]] of the [[Southern Song dynasty]],<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> it is a classic example of a ''Shussan Shaka'' in the Chinese orthodox style.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> There is no inscription on this painting other than the artist's signature,<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> which identifies him as "Painter-in-Attendance" at the Imperial Academy.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
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Liang Kai was not a Zen monk painter, but after he abandoned his position at the Imperial Academy and turned to a lifestyle of heavy drinking, his portraits came to suggest influences of the Chan painting tradition.<ref name="Kanazawa 1979">{{Cite book|title=Japanese Ink Painting: Early Zen Masterpieces|last=Kanazawa|first=Hiroshi|publisher=Kodansha International Ltd.|year=1979|location=Tokyo|pages=84–87|chapter=Shaka Descending the Mountain}}</ref> Since his ''Shussan Shaka'' pre-dates this move, however, it bears the mark of his earlier work: a carefully planned and executed "academic" style.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> According to the analysis of Hiroshi Kanazawa, Liang Kai's ''Shakyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism'' presents the viewer with an as yet unenlightened Śākyamuni.<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> |
Liang Kai was not a Zen monk painter, but after he abandoned his position at the Imperial Academy and turned to a lifestyle of heavy drinking, his portraits came to suggest influences of the Chan painting tradition.<ref name="Kanazawa 1979">{{Cite book|title=Japanese Ink Painting: Early Zen Masterpieces|last=Kanazawa|first=Hiroshi|publisher=Kodansha International Ltd.|year=1979|location=Tokyo|pages=84–87|chapter=Shaka Descending the Mountain}}</ref> Since his ''Shussan Shaka'' pre-dates this move, however, it bears the mark of his earlier work: a carefully planned and executed "academic" style.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> According to the analysis of Hiroshi Kanazawa, Liang Kai's ''Shakyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism'' presents the viewer with an as yet unenlightened Śākyamuni.<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> |
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Although depicting the same subject, the Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'' differs radically in style from Liang Kai's version.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> In contrast to Liang Kai's ''Shussan Shaka'', the Cleveland version includes only the ground and no other landscape elements.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> There is also much sparser detail on Śākyamuni's face and body.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> The artist has employed mostly light, washy ink tonalities with some dark details for an effect known as "apparition painting."<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
Although depicting the same subject, the Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'' differs radically in style from Liang Kai's version.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> In contrast to Liang Kai's ''Shussan Shaka'', the Cleveland version includes only the ground and no other landscape elements.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> There is also much sparser detail on Śākyamuni's face and body.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> The artist has employed mostly light, washy ink tonalities with some dark details for an effect known as "apparition painting."<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
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The Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'' bears an inscription attributed to the Zen priest Chijue Daochong, ( |
The Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'' bears an inscription attributed to the Zen priest Chijue Daochong, (1170–1251),<ref name="Brinker 1997" /> which reads: |
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{{Quote|text=Since entering the mountain, too dried out and emaciated<br>Frosty cold over the snow,<br>After having a twinkling of revelation with impassioned eyes<br>Why then do you want to come back to the world?|sign=|source=Chijue Daochong<ref name="Zainie 1978" />}}In Brinker's view, Chijue Daocheng's poem exhibits an interpretation of this image as a portrait of the Buddha returning to society having already attained enlightenment, or "revelation," in the mountains.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> However, Carla M. Zainie notes that Chijue Daochong's tone of questioning leaves this point open to debate.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
{{Quote|text=Since entering the mountain, too dried out and emaciated<br/>Frosty cold over the snow,<br/>After having a twinkling of revelation with impassioned eyes<br/>Why then do you want to come back to the world?|sign=|source=Chijue Daochong<ref name="Zainie 1978" />}}In Brinker's view, Chijue Daocheng's poem exhibits an interpretation of this image as a portrait of the Buddha returning to society having already attained enlightenment, or "revelation," in the mountains.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> However, Carla M. Zainie notes that Chijue Daochong's tone of questioning leaves this point open to debate.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
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=== The Freer ''Shussan Shaka'' === |
=== The Freer ''Shussan Shaka'' === |
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This monochrome ''Shussan Shaka'' is characteristic of Chan painting style in the late-Southern Song and Yuan Dynasties.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> While the work overall appears very carefully composed and executed, the fine detail of Sakyamuni's face and body is juxtaposed with the less meticulous character of his robes.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> The painter of the Freer ''Shussan Shaka'' went yet further than the painter of the Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'' by eschewing background and landscape elements altogether.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
This monochrome ''Shussan Shaka'' is characteristic of Chan painting style in the late-Southern Song and Yuan Dynasties.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> While the work overall appears very carefully composed and executed, the fine detail of Sakyamuni's face and body is juxtaposed with the less meticulous character of his robes.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> The painter of the Freer ''Shussan Shaka'' went yet further than the painter of the Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'' by eschewing background and landscape elements altogether.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
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The painting bears an inscription by Xiyan Liaohui ( |
The painting bears an inscription by Xiyan Liaohui (1198–1262), a Chan abbot originally from Sichuan.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Xiyan Liaohui's inscription, brushed in the "running script" style and emulating the hand of [[Wuzhun Shifan]], reads: |
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{{Quote|text=At midnight he saw the morning star.<br>In the mountains his cold words had increased.<br>Before his feet emerged from the mountains<br>These words were running through the world:<br>"I see that all living [creatures] are completed into Buddhas since some time.<br>There is only You, old fellow, who is still lacking complete Enlightenment.|sign=|source=Wuzhun Shifan<ref name="Brinker 1973" />}} |
{{Quote|text=At midnight he saw the morning star.<br/>In the mountains his cold words had increased.<br/>Before his feet emerged from the mountains<br/>These words were running through the world:<br/>"I see that all living [creatures] are completed into Buddhas since some time.<br/>There is only You, old fellow, who is still lacking complete Enlightenment.|sign=|source=Wuzhun Shifan<ref name="Brinker 1973" />}} |
||
Helmut Brinker characterizes the tone of this colophon as "desperate" and "despairing," belying "frustration" and "discontent," presenting to the reader a Śākyamuni who has not yet reached his goal.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
Helmut Brinker characterizes the tone of this colophon as "desperate" and "despairing," belying "frustration" and "discontent," presenting to the reader a Śākyamuni who has not yet reached his goal.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> |
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Line 76: | Line 79: | ||
While Hiroshi Kanazawa posits that this portrait of ''Shussan Shaka'' is modeled after Liang Kai's famous rendition,<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> Carla M. Zainie suggests it is evidently inspired by the Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'', to which it also bears stylistic similarities.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> For instance, the monochrome Choraku-ji painting is characterized by variations in ink tonality and dynamically modulated brushstrokes like the Cleveland version.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
While Hiroshi Kanazawa posits that this portrait of ''Shussan Shaka'' is modeled after Liang Kai's famous rendition,<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> Carla M. Zainie suggests it is evidently inspired by the Cleveland ''Shussan Shaka'', to which it also bears stylistic similarities.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> For instance, the monochrome Choraku-ji painting is characterized by variations in ink tonality and dynamically modulated brushstrokes like the Cleveland version.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
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The inscriber of this work was also a Zen priest, identified as Dongming Huizhi ([[Japanese language|Japanese]]: Tōmyō E'nichi),<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> who lived from |
The inscriber of this work was also a Zen priest, identified as Dongming Huizhi ([[Japanese language|Japanese]]: Tōmyō E'nichi),<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> who lived from 1272–1340.<ref name="Pal 1984" /> In 1309, this priest of Chinese origin relocated to Japan, where he went on to establish a monastery in [[Kamakura]].<ref name="Kanazawa 1979" /> His inscription reads:<blockquote>''He enters the mountains and returns from the mountains. In the East it flows rapidly, in the West it disappears. He has the bearing of a Phoenix and the manner of a Dragon. He is draped in silk, but emaciated to the bone. This is what he achieved in six years of asceticism: He became utterly confused.''<ref name="Pal 1984" /></blockquote>According to Helmut Brinker, Huizhi's emphasis on Śākyamuni's state of confusion suggests that the man in the painting has not yet achieved self-realization.<ref name="Brinker 1973" /> Yet, Carla M. Zainie suggests that Huizhi's colophon remains open to interpretation due to the fact that "confused" could alternatively be taken to signify a kind of spiritual revelation.<ref name="Zainie 1978" /> |
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=== Mori Sosen's ''Shussan Shaka'' === |
=== Mori Sosen's ''Shussan Shaka'' === |
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The motif of ''Shussan Shaka'' saw renewed popularity in art and worship during the Edo Period ( |
The motif of ''Shussan Shaka'' saw renewed popularity in art and worship during the Edo Period (1603–1868), when Zen painting came to exert its influence on broader Japanese art and culture.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> Hence, [[Mori Sosen]]'s ''Shaka Descending from the Mountains'' at the [[Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art]] constitutes not only an example of a much later (ca. 1800) ''Shussan Shaka'' painting, but also a significant divergence in composition and style from conventional representations of this motif.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> It may be inspired by an earlier ''Shussan Shaka'' from the [[Kanō school|Kano School]].<ref name="Graham 2007" /> |
||
The artist Mori Sosen was not a Zen monk but rather a professional "town painter" supported by patronage.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> He is most well known for his realistic paintings of monkeys, which artistic background Patricia J. Graham suggests allowed him to bring an element of playfulness to the religious subject matter of ''Shussan Shaka''.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> His portrayal of Śākyamuni in a humble and somewhat whimsical manner suggest the influence of the iconoclastic strain of Zen art.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> Like its predecessors, Mori Sosen's ''Shussan Shaka'' stresses the humanity and ordinariness of the |
The artist Mori Sosen was not a Zen monk but rather a professional "town painter" supported by patronage.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> He is most well known for his realistic paintings of monkeys, which artistic background Patricia J. Graham suggests allowed him to bring an element of playfulness to the religious subject matter of ''Shussan Shaka''.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> His portrayal of Śākyamuni in a humble and somewhat whimsical manner suggest the influence of the iconoclastic strain of Zen art.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> Like its predecessors, Mori Sosen's ''Shussan Shaka'' stresses the humanity and ordinariness of the historical Buddha.<ref name="Graham 2007" /> In her analysis, Graham suggests that this resonates with the egalitarian quality of Zen beliefs about universal [[buddha-nature]] and the accessibility of enlightenment.<ref name="Graham 2007" />[[File:82-4 Sosen-ShakaDescending front.png|thumb|Mori Sosen, ''Shaka Descending from the Mountains'', ca. 1800, hanging scroll, ink and light color on paper, 106.68 x 54.93 cm, Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.|393x393px]] |
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== References == |
== References == |
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== Bibliography == |
== Bibliography == |
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{{commonscat}} |
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* Brinker, Helmut. "Shussan Shaka in Sung and Yüan Painting." ''Arts Orientalis'' 9 (1973): 21-40. |
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* Brinker, Helmut. "Zen Masters in Words and Images." ''Art of Japan: Paintings, Prints and Screens: Selected articles from'' Orientations '' |
* Brinker, Helmut. "Shussan Shaka in Sung and Yüan Painting." ''Arts Orientalis'' 9 (1973): 21–40. |
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* Brinker, Helmut. "Zen Masters in Words and Images." ''Art of Japan: Paintings, Prints and Screens: Selected articles from'' Orientations ''1984–2002'', 195–204. Hong Kong: Orientations Magazine, Ltd., 2002. |
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* Brinker, Helmut and Hiroshi Kanazawa. "Themes and Genres of Zen Painting: The Historical Buddha Sakyamuni." ''Zen:'' ''Masters of Meditation in Images and Writings'', trans. Andreas Lesinger, |
* Brinker, Helmut and Hiroshi Kanazawa. "Themes and Genres of Zen Painting: The Historical Buddha Sakyamuni." ''Zen:'' ''Masters of Meditation in Images and Writings'', trans. Andreas Lesinger, 131–135. Zurich: Artibus Asiae, 1997. |
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* Cummings, Mary. "Austerities." ''The Lives of the Buddha in the Art and Literature of Asia''., |
* Cummings, Mary. "Austerities." ''The Lives of the Buddha in the Art and Literature of Asia''., 153–161. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies, 1982. |
||
* Graham, Patricia J. "Professional Icon-Makers." ''Faith and Power in Japanese Buddhist Art, |
* Graham, Patricia J. "Professional Icon-Makers." ''Faith and Power in Japanese Buddhist Art, 1600–2005'', 127–249. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press, 2007. |
||
* Kanazawa, Hiroshi. "Shaka Descending the Mountain." ''Japanese Ink Painting: Early Zen Masterpieces'', trans. Barbara Ford, |
* Kanazawa, Hiroshi. "Shaka Descending the Mountain." ''Japanese Ink Painting: Early Zen Masterpieces'', trans. Barbara Ford, 84–87. Tokyo: Kodansha International Ltd., 1979. |
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* Kuwayama, George. "The Buddha Image in China." ''Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art'', ed. Pratapaditya Pal, |
* Kuwayama, George. "The Buddha Image in China." ''Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art'', ed. Pratapaditya Pal, 165–174. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984. |
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* Pal, Pratapaditya. "The Legendary Life of Buddha Sakyamuni." ''Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art'', ed. Pratapaditya Pal, |
* Pal, Pratapaditya. "The Legendary Life of Buddha Sakyamuni." ''Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art'', ed. Pratapaditya Pal, 37–128, but mainly 96-100. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984. |
||
* Poster, Amy G. "The Buddha Image in Japan." ''Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art'', ed. Pratapaditya Pal, |
* Poster, Amy G. "The Buddha Image in Japan." ''Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art'', ed. Pratapaditya Pal, 183–250. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1984. |
||
* Zainie, Carla M. "Sources for Some Early Japanese Ink Paintings." ''The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art'' 65, no. 7 (Sep., 1978): |
* Zainie, Carla M. "Sources for Some Early Japanese Ink Paintings." ''The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art'' 65, no. 7 (Sep., 1978): 232–246. |
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{{authority control}} |
{{authority control}} |
Latest revision as of 05:21, 18 August 2024
Shussan Shaka (Japanese: 出山釈迦 shussan shaka; Chinese: 出山釋迦 chūshān shìjiā; English: Śākyamuni Descending from the Mountain)[1] is a subject in East Asian Buddhist art and poetry, in which Śākyamuni Buddha returns from six years of asceticism in the mountains, having realized that ascetic practice is not the path to enlightenment.[2] The story of Shussan Shaka is an important subject in painting from both China and Japan,[3] but rarely or never found in Buddhist art outside of East Asia, where a mountain retreat is not part of the story of this part of the Buddha's life.
According to the story, Śākyamuni, after leaving his palace, retreated into the mountains to seek enlightenment.[4] Accompanied by five other ascetics, he meditated and fasted to a severe extent, his body becoming thin and emaciated.[4] After six years, Sujata, a young girl, gave Śākyamuni a quantity of milk rice, which he ate.[4] Once he made this decision to end his fast, the five people practicing asceticism with him were disappointed and left him.[4] So, a solitary Śākyamuni descended the mountain, left the life of extreme austerity behind him, and traveled instead to Gaya, the city that would become known as the famous site of his enlightenment under the bodhi tree.[4]
As a subject in art, Shussan Shaka is distinctive in its emphasis on the humanity of the historical Buddha,[2] who in this and some other East Asian subjects is often given a beard, and a realistic, rather thin and dishevelled appearance, in contrast to traditional depictions of the Buddha in art.[5] Key interpretive debates about paintings on this theme pivot on the question of whether the artist portrays Śākyamuni as enlightened or not.[3]
Origins
[edit]Emergence in China
[edit]Since different Buddhist traditions have different beliefs about Śākyamuni's journey to enlightenment, there is no universal version of the biography of the historical Buddha.[4] The story of Shussan Shaka is not present in traditional Mahayana Buddhist texts or artwork, indicating that this part of Śākyamuni's biography was a Chan Buddhist innovation of the tenth century.[3] While reference to Śākyamuni's six years of asceticism is present in the Buddhacarita, no mountain locale is mentioned in that text,[4] and indeed the traditional locations for Śākyamuni's life after the Great Departure are all broadly in the Indo-Gangetic plain, although the Vulture Peak in the Rajgir Hills in Bihar was a favourite place in his later life. The mountain setting was likely of Chinese origin because in Chinese Buddhism, Daoism, and Confucianism alike, mountains are believed to be holy places,[4] and Daoist sages in particular often retreated to mountains for meditation.[6]
Shussan Shaka was popularized as a subject in painting in the thirteenth century during the Chinese Song Dynasty (960–1279),[7] the period during which Chan reached its height in China.[8] It became a particularly prevalent feature of paintings produced in the Chan temples of Zhejiang Province.[7] The artist credited with initiating this motific tradition is the Northern Song literatus Li Gonglin (1049–1106).[2] Though not extant, Li Gonglin's Shussan Shaka is referenced in inscriptions on other Shussan Shaka paintings, which have led scholars to this conclusion.[2] Li's painting style involved fine lines and precise brushwork.[2] In general, Chinese paintings of Shussan Shaka followed one of two styles: the first was the traditional Chinese style that featured color, thin outlines, and detailed depictions of figure and landscape, while the second was the characteristically Zen style of monochrome painting, thicker lines with a 'spontaneous' quality, and fewer landscape elements.[4] The former was the earlier style, common in the Song Dynasty, while into the Yuan Dynasty (1271–1368) it was the latter style that prevailed.[4]
Transmission to Japan
[edit]Chan Buddhism was transmitted from China to Japan (where it is known as Zen) during the thirteenth century, along with the unique styles and motifs of the Chan painting tradition.[9] For example, in the fourteenth century, the famous Shussan Shaka by Chinese painter Liang Kai (ca. 1140-ca. 1210) was transported by Zen monks to Japan, where it inspired later Japanese paintings.[3] Hence, early Japanese renditions of Shussan Shaka were based closely on Chinese models.[10] Since Japanese priests were often the ones transporting paintings back to their home country, Chinese Shussan Shaka paintings often ended up in Japanese monasteries, and subsequent copies or imitations were created in monastery ateliers.[2] In Japan, Shussan Shaka became particularly associated with the Rinzai sect of Zen Buddhism and saw more prolonged popularity as a painting subject than in China, even into the Edo Period.[11] In Japan, unlike in China, this Zen painting motif was on rare occasions translated to other forms of art, such as print illustration and sculpture.[4]
Significance
[edit]Role in Early Chan/Zen
[edit]Though part of a broader tradition in Buddhist art and literature across Asia of depicting Śākyamuni during his years of asceticism, the story of Shussan Shaka in particular is unique to Zen.[12] Typically, Zen spurned iconographic depictions of Buddhist deities as seen in the art of other sects.[8] However, early Zen placed great emphasis on the centrality of Śākyamuni Buddha, whose role had become downplayed in recent Mahayana Buddhism.[2] This emphasis was tied to the task of establishing an authoritative Zen patriarchal lineage traceable all the way back to the historical Buddha.[3] Hence, according to Helmut Brinker and Hiroshi Kanazawa, the chief function of the motif of Shussan Shaka is to demonstrate "Śākyamuni's role as earthly religion founder."[3] For this reason, portrayals of Śākyamuni descending the mountain after asceticism generally call viewers' attention to the human frailty of this important figure, grounding him in the earthly as opposed to deifying him.[3] Śākyamuni appears starved and tired, his body is gaunt and bony, and his face may bear a dismayed expression.[4] He is also commonly depicted as a monk.[10]
In addition to its relevance to lineage claims, Shussan Shaka also reflects important beliefs and practices of the Zen religious tradition.[12] For instance, Śākyamuni's weariness as he walks down from the mountain suggests that enlightenment does not come easily.[12] The solitariness of Śākyamuni's descent reflects Zen teaching about the importance of individual spirituality and solitary meditation.[10] At the same time, his return to society after retreating to the mountains may also suggest that self-realization is fostered by living in community with others.[12] That Śākyamuni's hands are always concealed by the folds of his robe rather than forming a mudra resonates with the Zen Buddhist virtue of wordlessness.[2] Finally, the narrative of the story itself in conjunction with artists' emphasis on earthliness suggests, in accordance with Zen teaching, that enlightenment is not found by completely cutting off oneself from the world.[2]
Historically, paintings on this motif had a relatively small audience, circulating among the overlapping networks of literati elites and Chan monks.[2] In ritual use, Shussan Shaka paintings are hung on the walls of Rinzai Zen temples during the holiday celebrating the enlightenment of Śākyamuni Buddha.[11] Seven days of meditation begin on the eighth day of the twelfth month, at the conclusion of which an image of Shussan Shaka is displayed and the mantra of Great Compassion said before it.[2] This practice suggests that Śākyamuni's years of asceticism and self-denial in the mountains are indeed tied to his enlightenment in the religious understanding of these Zen practitioners.[2]
Interpretive Debates
[edit]In interpreting Chinese and Japanese paintings of Shussan Shaka, a key question for scholars is whether the Śākyamuni depicted is the already enlightened Buddha or simply a man disillusioned with austerities but yet to become the "enlightened one."[3] Among scholars, two opposing schools of thought persist on this issue.[2] However, Zen adherents tend to favor the former view: that Śākyamuni attained enlightenment during his time in the mountains.[2] This would suggest that Śākyamuni is portrayed as a bodhisattva, forestalling nirvana and descending from the mountain to assist others on the path to enlightenment.[4] In light of this reading, Śākyamuni's subsequent meditation and what is conventionally understood as his enlightenment under the bodhi tree at Gaya then also poses an interpretive challenge to scholars.[2]
Although Shussan Shaka paintings indeed present viewers with the emaciated frame of a distinctly human Śākyamuni, the question of enlightenment is complicated by the presence in some paintings of symbols and iconography indicating holiness.[4] Some artists paint Śākyamuni with a halo, an uṣṇīṣa, or an urna, each of which may signify enlightenment.[4] In Japanese Shussan Shaka paintings, the baldness on top of Śākyamuni's head can also represent an uṣṇīṣa.[10] Most Chinese Shussan Shaka paintings do not feature a halo, which scholars therefore understand as primarily a Japanese innovation.[2] Apart from the use of religious symbols, poetic inscriptions also animate discussions on the enlightened status of Śākyamuni in a given painting.[2] For instance, according to Helmut Brinker, the following colophon by the Zen master Zhongfeng Mingben (1263–1323) suggests an interpretation of Shussan Shaka as an enlightened Buddha returning to the world to spread his wordless teaching:
He who emerges from the mountains and has entered the mountains:
That is originally You.
If one calls him "You"
It still is not he.
The venerable master Shijia (Śākyamuni) comes.
Ha, ha, ha...! He glances over ten million miles of billows.
Huanzhu Mingben salutes with respectfully folded hands.— Zhongfeng Mingben[2]
While some Zen masters' inscriptions situate them in the same camp as Mingben, Brinker suggests that still others favor the alternative reading of Shussan Shaka as a portrait of a man still seeking self-realization, or at least to cast doubt on the completeness of his enlightenment.[2] One example is the following colophon by Songyuan Chongyo (1132–1202):
At midnight he passed over the city wall
With the beauty of a dragon and the air of a phoenix.
He got loose from foolery and let go silliness.
[But] the Honorable [Śākyamuni] was not aware of it.
The day he came out of the mountains [because] he
could no [longer] bear hunger and cold,
He forcibly spoke of the six years as the time of completing his way.— Songyuan Chongyo[2]
In Chinese Painting
[edit]Liang Kai's Shussan Shaka
[edit]Liang Kai's Śākyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism, from the first half of the 13th century and now in the Tokyo National Museum, is one of the oldest extant Shussan Shaka paintings, and the most famous.[3] Produced under the patronage of Emperor Ningzong or Emperor Lizong of the Southern Song dynasty,[3] it is a classic example of a Shussan Shaka in the Chinese orthodox style.[4] There is no inscription on this painting other than the artist's signature,[7] which identifies him as "Painter-in-Attendance" at the Imperial Academy.[2]
Liang Kai was not a Zen monk painter, but after he abandoned his position at the Imperial Academy and turned to a lifestyle of heavy drinking, his portraits came to suggest influences of the Chan painting tradition.[13] Since his Shussan Shaka pre-dates this move, however, it bears the mark of his earlier work: a carefully planned and executed "academic" style.[2] According to the analysis of Hiroshi Kanazawa, Liang Kai's Shakyamuni Descending the Mountain After Asceticism presents the viewer with an as yet unenlightened Śākyamuni.[13]
The Cleveland Shussan Shaka
[edit]The painting of Shussan Shaka at the Cleveland Museum of Art is the oldest extant ink monochrome rendition of this theme.[7] Although its artist is unknown, the work is based on the style of the painter Li Que.[4] A member of the Southern Song literati who interacted closely with Chan priests, Li Que had in turn studied Liang Kai's later work, and was known for his spontaneous painting style.[2]
Although depicting the same subject, the Cleveland Shussan Shaka differs radically in style from Liang Kai's version.[7] In contrast to Liang Kai's Shussan Shaka, the Cleveland version includes only the ground and no other landscape elements.[2] There is also much sparser detail on Śākyamuni's face and body.[7] The artist has employed mostly light, washy ink tonalities with some dark details for an effect known as "apparition painting."[7]
The Cleveland Shussan Shaka bears an inscription attributed to the Zen priest Chijue Daochong, (1170–1251),[3] which reads:
Since entering the mountain, too dried out and emaciated
Frosty cold over the snow,
After having a twinkling of revelation with impassioned eyes
Why then do you want to come back to the world?— Chijue Daochong[7]
In Brinker's view, Chijue Daocheng's poem exhibits an interpretation of this image as a portrait of the Buddha returning to society having already attained enlightenment, or "revelation," in the mountains.[2] However, Carla M. Zainie notes that Chijue Daochong's tone of questioning leaves this point open to debate.[7]
The Freer Shussan Shaka
[edit]Scholars date the Chinese Shussan Shaka painting at the Freer Gallery of Art between 1239 and 1260, most likely close to 1250.[2] This painting of Śākyamuni Emerging from the Mountains has been dubiously attributed to Hu Zhifu, a man about whom little historical information is available.[2]
This monochrome Shussan Shaka is characteristic of Chan painting style in the late-Southern Song and Yuan Dynasties.[2] While the work overall appears very carefully composed and executed, the fine detail of Sakyamuni's face and body is juxtaposed with the less meticulous character of his robes.[2] The painter of the Freer Shussan Shaka went yet further than the painter of the Cleveland Shussan Shaka by eschewing background and landscape elements altogether.[2]
The painting bears an inscription by Xiyan Liaohui (1198–1262), a Chan abbot originally from Sichuan.[2] Xiyan Liaohui's inscription, brushed in the "running script" style and emulating the hand of Wuzhun Shifan, reads:
At midnight he saw the morning star.
In the mountains his cold words had increased.
Before his feet emerged from the mountains
These words were running through the world:
"I see that all living [creatures] are completed into Buddhas since some time.
There is only You, old fellow, who is still lacking complete Enlightenment.— Wuzhun Shifan[2]
Helmut Brinker characterizes the tone of this colophon as "desperate" and "despairing," belying "frustration" and "discontent," presenting to the reader a Śākyamuni who has not yet reached his goal.[2]
In Japanese Painting
[edit]The Seattle Shussan Shaka
[edit]This anonymous work housed at the Seattle Art Museum is the earliest known Japanese Shussan Shaka painting in existence today.[3] It is a 13th century Japanese painting based on a 12th century Chinese prototype.[12] In turn, this important painting was used as a model for subsequent versions in Japan.[4] A seal on the Seattle Shussan Shaka, along with its style and materials, associates it with the painting workshops of Kozanji, a monastery in Kyoto.[4]
This Shussan Shaka has the simple, abbreviated quality of a sketch.[7] Like the Cleveland Shussan Shaka, the only landscape element depicted on this hanging scroll is the ground on which Śākyamuni walks.[2]
The Choraku-ji Shussan Shaka
[edit]Although the artist of the Choraku-ji Shussan Shaka is unknown, the style of the painting leads scholars to infer that the creator of this work was a Zen priest rather than a trained painter.[13]
While Hiroshi Kanazawa posits that this portrait of Shussan Shaka is modeled after Liang Kai's famous rendition,[13] Carla M. Zainie suggests it is evidently inspired by the Cleveland Shussan Shaka, to which it also bears stylistic similarities.[7] For instance, the monochrome Choraku-ji painting is characterized by variations in ink tonality and dynamically modulated brushstrokes like the Cleveland version.[7]
The inscriber of this work was also a Zen priest, identified as Dongming Huizhi (Japanese: Tōmyō E'nichi),[13] who lived from 1272–1340.[4] In 1309, this priest of Chinese origin relocated to Japan, where he went on to establish a monastery in Kamakura.[13] His inscription reads:
He enters the mountains and returns from the mountains. In the East it flows rapidly, in the West it disappears. He has the bearing of a Phoenix and the manner of a Dragon. He is draped in silk, but emaciated to the bone. This is what he achieved in six years of asceticism: He became utterly confused.[4]
According to Helmut Brinker, Huizhi's emphasis on Śākyamuni's state of confusion suggests that the man in the painting has not yet achieved self-realization.[2] Yet, Carla M. Zainie suggests that Huizhi's colophon remains open to interpretation due to the fact that "confused" could alternatively be taken to signify a kind of spiritual revelation.[7]
Mori Sosen's Shussan Shaka
[edit]The motif of Shussan Shaka saw renewed popularity in art and worship during the Edo Period (1603–1868), when Zen painting came to exert its influence on broader Japanese art and culture.[11] Hence, Mori Sosen's Shaka Descending from the Mountains at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art constitutes not only an example of a much later (ca. 1800) Shussan Shaka painting, but also a significant divergence in composition and style from conventional representations of this motif.[11] It may be inspired by an earlier Shussan Shaka from the Kano School.[11]
The artist Mori Sosen was not a Zen monk but rather a professional "town painter" supported by patronage.[11] He is most well known for his realistic paintings of monkeys, which artistic background Patricia J. Graham suggests allowed him to bring an element of playfulness to the religious subject matter of Shussan Shaka.[11] His portrayal of Śākyamuni in a humble and somewhat whimsical manner suggest the influence of the iconoclastic strain of Zen art.[11] Like its predecessors, Mori Sosen's Shussan Shaka stresses the humanity and ordinariness of the historical Buddha.[11] In her analysis, Graham suggests that this resonates with the egalitarian quality of Zen beliefs about universal buddha-nature and the accessibility of enlightenment.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ In English there are many variant titles, with "emerging", "mountains", different diacriticals and prepositions, and so on.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Brinker, Helmut (1973). "Shussan Shaka in Sung and Yüan Painting". Ars Orientalis. 9: 21–40. JSTOR 4629268.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Brinker, Helmut; Kanazawa, Hiroshi (1997). "Themes and Genres of Zen Painting: The Historical Buddha Sakyamuni". Zen: Masters of Meditation in Images and Writing. Zurich: Artibus Asiae. pp. 131–135.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Pal, Pratapaditya (1984). "The Legendary Life of Buddha Sakyamuni". In Pal, Pratapaditya (ed.). Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art. pp. 37–128.
- ^ Pal (1984), 19
- ^ Pal (1984), 19
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Zainie, Carla M. (September 1978). "Sources for Some Early Japanese Ink Paintings". The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art. 65 (7): 237. JSTOR 25159592.
- ^ a b Kuwayama, George (1984). Pal, Pratapaditya (ed.). Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art. pp. 165–174.
- ^ Brinker, Helmut (2002). "Zen Masters in Words and Images". Art of Japan: Paintings, Prints and Screens: Selected Articles from Orientations 1984–2002. Hong Kong: Orientations Magazine Ltd. pp. 195–204.
- ^ a b c d Poster, Amy G. (1984). "The Buddha Image in Japan". In Pal, Pratapaditya (ed.). Light of Asia: Buddha Sakyamuni in Asian Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art. pp. 183–250.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Graham, Patricia J. (2007). "Professional Icon-Makers". Faith and Power in Japanese Buddhist Art, 1600–2005. Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press. pp. 127–149.
- ^ a b c d e Cummings, Mary (1982). "Austerities". The Lives of the Buddha in the Art and Literature of Asia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Center for South and Southeast Asian Studies. pp. 153–161.
- ^ a b c d e f Kanazawa, Hiroshi (1979). "Shaka Descending the Mountain". Japanese Ink Painting: Early Zen Masterpieces. Tokyo: Kodansha International Ltd. pp. 84–87.
Bibliography
[edit]- Brinker, Helmut. "Shussan Shaka in Sung and Yüan Painting." Arts Orientalis 9 (1973): 21–40.
- Brinker, Helmut. "Zen Masters in Words and Images." Art of Japan: Paintings, Prints and Screens: Selected articles from Orientations 1984–2002, 195–204. Hong Kong: Orientations Magazine, Ltd., 2002.
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