|
||||||
Buddha images are intended to be depictions of the human qualities that he perfected - Compassion, Wisdom, Patience, Generosity and Kindness.
During his lifetime, the Buddha was never depicted in real life, in either paintings or graven images. In fact, for several centuries after his death, if he was depicted in a painting or sculpture, it was by a symbol such as a wheel (representing the doctrine of Buddhism), a tree (representing the Bodhi tree under which he attained enlightenment), a footprint or a stupa. This reluctance to depict a true-to-life representation of the Buddha and the sophisticated utilisation of aniconic symbols even in scenes where there would be other human figures were probably influenced by some of the Buddha's sayings (for example in the Dighanikaya), which disapproved of the creation of pictures of the Buddha after he had passed away. Gandhara and Mathura ArtIt is difficult to ascertain when exactly the first human images of the Buddha were created - but scholars generally agree that it was not until about 500 years after his death that these appeared. These earliest images that have been identified are dated to a period just before the beginning of the Christian era, and were found to originate from two main centres: Gandhara in what is today’s Pakistan's North West Frontier Province and the region of Mathura, in what is now north-central India. Just as in the case of Jesus Christ, none of the artists or sculptors who created these images had seen their subject in real life - so what they created was a stylised image of this great teacher. Modern Buddha ImagesIn the present century, however, it is not unusual to find the Buddha represented in various forms – with features conforming to the physiognomy of the population in which the painting or image is created. It is not surprising therefore that the Buddha looks Chinese in statues found in Hong Kong - and contrastingly non-Chinese in images of made by devotees in Sri Lanka. The most common type of Buddha image today depicts him meditating in the Lotus position - reminding Buddhists of the importance that meditation played in his life as well as the moment of his Enlightenment. Examples of Buddha imagesAmong the better known Buddha images in the world are:
The various images of the Buddha created by sculptors and artists all over the world over the past two thousand years are intended to be not just the depiction of a historical person, but a representation of the human qualities that he perfected - namely compassion, wisdom, patience, generosity and kindness.
The copyright of the article Images of The Buddha in Buddhist History is owned by Sanjiva Wijesinha. Permission to republish Images of The Buddha in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||