Shakyamuni Triad: Buddha Attended by Manjushri and Samantabhadra, late 1300s, Cleveland Museum of Ar
Shakyamuni Triad: Buddha Attended by Manjushri and Samantabhadra, late 1300s, Cleveland Museum of Art: Chinese ArtThis triptych is a rare example of Yuan Buddhist painting. It depicts the historic Buddha Shakyamuni flanked by two attending bodhisattvas, Manjushri (the bodhisattva of wisdom, riding a lion) and Samantabhadra (the bodhisattva of universal virtue, riding an elephant). Included in the symmetrical configuration are also the two disciples of the Buddha, Ananada and Kasyapa, two foreigners who attend the bodhisattvas’ lion and elephant, and a youth and a female worshipper, all of whom seek enlightenment from the bohisattvas. The clouds above and around the divine beings form one scene that illustrates Shakyamuni’s sermon from the Lotus Sutra. This text became an important basis for Buddhist faith throughout East Asia and was central to the Mahayana school of Buddhism. The Lotus Sutra text is on display in a handscroll case nearby.Size: Painting: 106.9 x 46.4 cm (42 1/16 x 18 ¼ in.); Overall with knobs: 192 x 66.7 cm (75 9/16 x 26 ¼ in.)Medium: set of three hanging scrolls, ink and color on silkhttps://clevelandart.org/art/2009.342 -- source link
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