Shakyamuni Buddha - Jataka (previous lives)
(item no. 65816)

Tibet

1700 - 1799

Buddhist Lineage

Ground Mineral Pigment on Cotton

Collection of Rubin Museum of Art


 
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Additional Images
   View detail of central figure
   View Lion King
   View Great Diligence
   View Woodpecker
   View Golden King
   View Buffalo
   View Numbered Image


Previous Life Stories of the Buddha (Tibetan: kye rab. Sanskrit: Jataka): A painting from a large set of approximately twenty-one paintings depicting one-hundred and eight stories, created in a Central Tibetan Menri School painting style. (See other paintings from the same Jataka set).

In Himalayan and Tibetan culture the Jatakas are commonly depicted in art and follow a famous Indian text called the Jatakamala narrating thirty-four morality tales often using animals as the central subject. This set of paintings depicts the original thirty-four stories along with an additional seventy-four making one hundred and eight stories in all, compiled by the 3rd Karmapa Rangjung Dorje. See blockprint images of all one hundred and eight Jataka stories.

At the lower left is story number #33: The Buffalo: A Tale of Patience.

At the lower right is story number #34: The Woodpecker: Kindness Without Thought of Reward.

At the top left is story number #35: The Story of the Lion King.

At the top right is story number #36: The Trader Mahavirya (Great Diligence).

At the bottom center is story number #37: King Suvarnavarna (Golden King).

Jeff Watt 11-2007


View other items in:
Thematic Set
Shakyamuni Buddha: Jataka Stories Main Page
Collection of Rubin Museum of Art: Painting Gallery IV
Painting Set: One Hundred Jataka Stories (Central Tibet)
Subject: Narrative Examples (Greyscale)



Copyright © 2012 Shelley and Donald Rubin Foundation.
Photographed Image Copyright © 2004 Rubin Museum of Art