Portable Buddhist Shrine
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Walters Art Museum Object Description
Pilgrims and itinerant monks used portable shrines for worship and teaching. In the central panel, the historical Buddha Shakyamuni (Siddhartha Gautama, ca. 563–483 BCE) preaches a sermon while surrounded by disciples, donors, and guardian deities. Above, a celestial Buddha from the distant past listens to the sermon from a three-storied pagoda. At the bottom, four musicians flank a stupa, a sacred mound or architectural structure that safeguards a relic of the Buddha or another venerated being. On the left and right doors, the bodhisattvas Manjushri and Samantabhadra are on their animal mounts. Below them are the 16 disciples of Buddha Sakyamuni, referred to as "arhats" in Sanskrit and "lohans" in Chinese.For the latest information about this object, Portable Buddhist Shrine, ...
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All Works in Curationist’s archives can be reproduced and used freely. How to attribute this Work:
Chinese, Portable Buddhist Shrine, 10th-12th century (Song dynasty (960–1279)), Walters Art Museum. CC0, GNU Free Documentation License.
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