Buddha Shakyamuni - Shakyamuni
(item no. 605)

Tibet

1800 - 1899

Uncertain Lineage

93.98x64.77cm (37x25.50in)

Ground Mineral Pigment on Cotton

Collection of Rubin Museum of Art

(acc.# F1998.3.3)

 


Shakyamuni, Buddha (Tibetan: sha kya tu pa, sang gye. English: the Sage of the Shakya Clan, Enlightened One).

Sanskrit: Buddha Shakyamuni Tibetan: Sang gye sha kya tu pa

Peaceful and composed, gazing forward, with a body golden yellow in colour, he sits in vajra posture with the legs folded right over left. The hair is formed of small dark blue tufts with a large mound on the top adorned with a gold ornament; long earlobes distinctive of royal bearing. The right hand held extended across the knee touches the ground in the mudra (gesture) of Earth Witness. The left is placed in the mudra of meditation, resting in the lap. Attired in the garb of a monk, he wears orange, red and pink patchwork robes and a red lower garment. The right arm and shoulder remain uncovered. Above a moon disc and pink flower blossom rising from a lotus pond, he sits surrounded by a blue-orange nimbus and green areola of radiant light. A low table in front supports a gold water flask, Dharma wheel and incense burner.

At the top and sides, alternating in rows, are small forms of Shakyamuni and Amitabha buddha. The 36 Shakyamunis are similar in appearance to the central figure. The 34 forms of Amitabha are red with the hands placed in the mudra of meditation in the lap. Along the bottom in three rows are 32 repeating forms of the bodhisattva of compassion, Chaturbhuja Avalokiteshvara, white, with one face and four hands.

These types of paintings with a central peaceful figure and multiples of smaller surrounding figures are generally commissioned for the purpose of generating merit and overcoming obstacles; or commissioned on behalf of a deceased family member.

Jeff Watt 5-99


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Shakyamuni Buddha (Main Page)
Collection of Rubin Museum of Art: Painting Gallery III
1800 - 1899 (19th Century) Part I



Copyright © 2008 Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation.
Photographed Image Copyright © 2004 Rubin Museum of Art