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Art of Asia
Course: Art of Asia > Unit 4
Lesson 8: Kamakura period (1185-1333)Jizō Bosatsu
Jizō Bosatsu, late 12th–mid-13th century (Kamakura period, Japan), wood with lacquer, gold leaf, cutout gold foil decoration, and color, 188.6 cm high (The Metropolitan Museum of Art). Created by Beth Harris and Steven Zucker.
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Video transcript
(jazzy piano music) - [Steven] We're on the second floor in the Metropolitan Museum of Art in the Japanese Galleries. We're looking at this
almost life sized carved wooden figure of Jizo,
who is a Bodhisattva. - [Hannah] A Bodhisattva is a deity that attends on a
Buddha, the primary deity of Buddhist sects. Every Buddha has his own
specific Bodhisattvas. Jizo attends the Buddha Amitabha,
the Buddha of compassion. - [Steven] A Bodhisattva
is an enlightened being that has not chosen to
remove himself entirely from our world. - [Hannah] An actual
Buddha has already attained enlightenment and has no place in the profane world any longer. So the Bodhisattva retains
that element of profanity so that he can help us. - [Steven] They function
as a kind of ladder to lead us into a higher realm. Considering the role of the Bodhisattva, this figure does seem
very formal, almost aloof. - [Hannah] The reason
why he looks that way is because he is in a state of meditation, and it is the assurance of his garments and what he is carrying, his
mendicant staff and his jewel, that convey the message of his compassion. - [Steven] So although he's earthly, he represents here access to the divine. We're looking at a sculpture
that may be 900 years old, and it's in spectacularly good condition. But we are seeing it out
of its original context. - [Hannah] It would have been in a chapel, and it might have been surrounded by beautiful bouquets of flowers. It would have probably been by itself, because although Ksitigarbha, or Jizo, is a Bodhisattva who attends Amitabha, he's also extremely important as a figure of devotion in his own right. Entire schools of worship arose around this particular figure. The people who made this
and the way it was worshiped was not as a sculpture,
the concept has no role in Buddhist tradition,
but as a religious figure. - [Steven] The way in which
I recognize this as Jizo is because of what he
holds, the monk's staff, the jewel in his left hand, but also because of his bald head,
referencing him as a monk, and particularly because
of the extended earlobes. - [Hannah] The lobe is
extended with a long slot-like shape in it that suggests
that once in an earlier form, he was wearing very, very heavy earrings. - [Steven] So he's traded his
glittering, worldly earrings for the simplified spiritual
garments of a monk. - [Hannah] And those
garments are referred to as the three garments, which originated in the Indian subcontinent
where the climate was very, very warm. And the notion came from the
idea that one should be garbed, but with rags from the trash heap. And so the garment of the traditional monk was three squares, one
to wrap around the hips, one to put over the shoulders,
and then one third one to put over both shoulders,
to keep one warm. - [Steven] He stands on a
pedestal that is actually a representation of a
gigantic lotus blossom, and the reference there
is this exquisite flower that begins its life in the mud. And this seems to me a
kind of similar reference, that through humble bearing,
one can spiritually blossom. - [Hannah] You can also
see other elements of that in his staff, which is a
mendicant monk's staff. - [Steve] By mendicant, you mean a monk that has given up all worldly possessions and is dependent on
the goodwill of others. - [Hannah] And the
mendicant monks would wander around village rural areas, and
when they came to a village, they would bang the staff
on the path and it has several rings at the top that dangle and they would rattle. - [Steven] We also see
an urna in his forehead. - [Hannah] It's just above the eyes, and it is a symbol of wisdom. - [Steven] So seeing
beyond the ordinary world, seeing into the spiritual realm. - [Hannah] He is holding an object that looks a bit like
an onion, and it sits on a small lotus blossom. This is the wish-granting
jewel, and it is one of the central symbols of Jizo. - [Steven] The hand that holds the jewel is so beautifully carved. Look at the delicacy of the fingertips that curl just at the nail. - [Hannah] The positions of the hands are known as mudras, and mudras is a term that is applied to the hand positions of many deities that come out
of the traditions of India as Jizo ultimately does. Every feature of this
is intended to convey some sort of theological concept. - [Steven] This carving dates to the late 12th or 13th century. This is a period in Japanese history that we call the Kamakura period, and it was a period of real upheaval. - [Hannah] The capital city of Kyoto is where the emperor
resided, and around him was a coterie of aristocrats. They began to fight amongst themselves and they farmed their
disputes out to mercenaries who were from the distant
branches of their families called cadet branches, and
these mercenary warriors then took over from the court itself. - [Steven] The emperor
remained, but became largely symbolic, and
real power resided now not in Kyoto, but rather
in Kamakura, outside of what is now Tokyo. This figure is so serene that
it displays no reference, at least to me, of the
political chaos that is-- - [Hannah] The violence
that was unfolding around the serenity of this
figure, it makes you think of the temple precinct
as a place of refuge. - [Steven] His facial features especially are meant to represent that of a boy. - [Hannah] The story of Jizo
is that in a previous life, he was a girl who was so distressed at her mother's evil ways the mother was relegated to Hell upon her death. And as a devoted
daughter, she was so upset she went into Hell to rescue her mother. Other stories say that
she made great efforts of obeisance to the deities
to rescue her mother. And in the process, the girl begins to see that other people are in
terrible torment in Hell as well. - [Steven] And this was
one of the motivations for Jizo remaining a Bodhisattva, although enlightened,
not giving up this world, but instead, turning first
her and then his attention to those suffering in the underworld. - [Hannah] And in Buddhist theology, deities such as this are always male. Jizo doesn't just become male
but becomes a little boy. - [Steven] Now in this temple carving, although boylike, the features
are still quite severe. But in more popular
representations of Jizo, you often have a much more
playful representation. - [Hannah] In many places,
you find rows of these Jizos to represent children who
have become ill and died. - [Steven] And this is
because Jizo is tasked with looking after and
freeing those children in the afterlife. So although we're looking at a sculpture that is eight or nine hundred years old, Jizo is very much present in
contemporary Japanese culture. (jazzy piano music)