Welcoming Descent of Jizō Bodhisattva

Minneapolis Institute of Art

Welcoming Descent of Jizō Bodhisattva

Japan

Date
first half 14th century
Medium
Hanging scroll, ink, color, and gold leaf on silk
Department
Asian Art
Institution
Minneapolis Institute of Art

Jizō is a bodhisattva (bosatsu in Japanese), a divine being who postpones enlightenment in order to assist the living. Here he descends to the earth on a cloud to save a suffering believer. He carries a staff and a wish-granting jewel (hōju). His feet rest on lotus blossoms. Although his head is shaved and his robes are those of a monk, Jizō’s body is adorned with gold jewelry and his outer garments are lavishly decorated with gold, signaling his status as a bodhisattva. Images of the descent of Jizō, which developed in Japan in the 1200s, likely originated at the religious complex made up of the Buddhist temple Kōfukuji and the Shinto shrine Kasuga in the city of Nara, a center for the worship of Jizō. Asia

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