Homework Resources

In the center of each footprint is a dharmachakra, a wheel-like structure that had long symbolized the Buddha’s teaching. Here, it surrounds a lotus flower, representing the Buddha’s purity. Near the heel is a three-pronged emblem known as a tritana. It symbolize the three things in which Buddhists can take refuge: the Buddha himself, his teaching, and the sangha (the Buddhist community). This particular footprint image also includes in the bottom corners toyakshis, Indian female earth spirits suggesting fertility. The position of their hands conveys a respectful greeting
Among the most striking of the many representation of this bodhisattva are those that portrayed him with numerous heads with which to hear the many cries of the suffering humanity and with multiple arms to aid them. As seen in the this figure of Senju Kannon from Japan in the 8th century.
Dating from the 12th-14th centuries, it depicts Amitabha in bright robes, accompanied by several bodhisattvas. They are shown welcoming a deceased person, represented as a naked boy in the stream of light that comes from the Amitabha’s forehead, into the Pure Land, where he will e installed on the golden lotus throne carried by the bodhisattvas. There he can continuously hear the teachings of the Buddha, while working off any remaining negative karma, before achieving complete liberation in nirvana.
1. Compare the first two sculptures. What moods are their respective artists trying to evoke?
2. Do you perceive any apparent Greco-Roman influences on the statue of the Parthian noblewoman? If so, what are they? How, if at all, have those influences been modified?
3. Consider the expressions, postures, and dress of the Gandharan and Chinese Buddhas. What responses do their respective sculptors hope to " evoke from viewers?
4. Continue your comparative analysis of statues 3 and 4. In what ways are they similar? How do they differ? Which are more significant, the similarities or the differences? What do you conclude from your answer?
5. Now compare statues 1 through 4. Do they share any common elements? Do any significant differences divide them? What conclusions follow from your answers?
6. Compare the Funan Buddha with the Gandharan Buddha. Do you see why scholars conclude that this was probably a local copy of a Gandharan original? Explain your answer.
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