Cover image for Buddhas and Bodhisattvas :  emanators and emanated beings in the Buddhist art of Gandhara, Central Asia, and China
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas : emanators and emanated beings in the Buddhist art of Gandhara, Central Asia, and China
Title:
Buddhas and Bodhisattvas : emanators and emanated beings in the Buddhist art of Gandhara, Central Asia, and China
Author:
Zhu, Tianshu.
ISBN:
9780549071396
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (469 p.).
General Note:
Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 68-06, Section: A, page: 2217.
Adviser: John Huntington.
Abstract:
This dissertation examines images of Buddhas, and some bodhisattvas, that contain clusters of small Buddhas, or bodhisattvas, inside their aura or halo. Specifically, the study considers the formation and the development of this motif from Gandhara, Central Asia (namely, Khotan and Kucha), and central China from about the third to seventh centuries, and analyzes them in relation to the essential teachings about the nature of a Buddha and nirman&dotbelow;abuddha (transformation-Buddha).

The depiction of small Buddha figures in the aura is a commonly seen convention in Chinese Buddhist art; however its history has not been thoroughly studied and its meaning is poorly understood. In Buddhism, the phenomenon that an awakened being can emit other awakened beings is a central Buddha concept. However, textual references are scattered in a wide range of scriptures over a long period of time, including doctrinal texts, commentaries and meditation manuals. These offer different, if not conflicting, explanations.

My detailed visual and typological analysis reveals that the depiction of small figures in the aura first emerged in Gandhara, with conceptual (bhavana) Buddha images. In these images, the small figures are shown tilted with a sense of emanation. In Khotan, and especially in China from the fifth century, the motif became widespread, and the depiction became increasingly schematized.

In this study, I identify the emanated images with the nirman&dotbelow;abuddha and suggest that the above trend in visual representations correlates to textual descriptions of the nirman&dotbelow;abuddha. Early Mahayana texts describe a new type of miracle---a Buddha emanates rays which further transform into nirman&dotbelow;abuddhas. Around the turn of the fifth century, nirman&dotbelow;abuddhas in the aura became a prominent body mark of a Buddha (in addition to incidental events).

On a theoretical level, the ultimate body of a Buddha is the inconceivable dharmakaya. It is a fundamental feature (as his compassion and skillful means) for a Buddha to transform into nirman&dotbelow;abuddhas to save sentient beings. All Buddhas are said to possess such power. My study suggests that the special iconographies with this motif either exemplify individual Buddhas emanating nirman&dotbelow;abuddhas or illustrate important aspects of the nirman&dotbelow;abuddha concept.
Local Note:
School code: 0168.
Electronic Access:
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Added Corporate Author:
Thesis Note:
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Ohio State University, 2007.
Field 805:
npmlib ysh
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