This painting is an unusual pastiche of Tibetan and Chinese imagery and painting techniques. The central figure, the bodhisattva and future Buddha Maitreya, is marked by his traditional Tibetan Buddhist iconographic attributes: he is red, has a stupa in his crown, and holds a blossoming branch with a vase on top. However, he is seated in a watery grotto and bamboo backdrop closely associated with Chinese paintings of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara, complete with a white parrot on the rocks to his right and the childlike pilgrim Sudhana below him. Despite these misleading background elements, the main figure can nonetheless be identified as Maitreya through the surrounding narrative scenes. The scene in the upper-right corner depicts the story of the sage Kashyapa passing on a robe to Maitreya, symbolic of the transmission of the Buddha’s teachings.The background reflects that the artists had a good grasp of Chinese landscape painting, with layers of ink and specialized brush techniques. Moreover a number of the figures, follow Chinese conventions of hair and dress. However, color notations in Tibetan script visible under the pigment layers found all over the composition, added by the master-artist to indicate how the composition should be painted by the artists working under him, suggest the hands of Tibetan artists at work.

Artwork Details

Title
Bodhisattva Maitreya
Dimensions
58 1/2 × 32 1/2 in. (estimated)
Medium
Pigments on cloth
Origin
Tibet or China
Classification(s)
paintings
Date
17th - 18th century
Credit Line
Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art, Gift of Shelley and Donald Rubin
Object number
C2006.66.34
Bibliography
Collection Highlights: The Rubin Museum of Art
HAR Number
1111
Published references
  • Marylin M. Rhie and Robert A. F. Thurman, Worlds of Transformation: Tibetan Art of Wisdom and Compassion (Tibet House, 1999), 198-200, no. 33.
  • J. Van Alphen, Collection Highlights: Rubin Museum of Art (Rubin Museum of Art, 2014), 118-119.
  • Li ai (Rhie Marylin M.) and Wanzhang Ge, 1998. Cang chuan fo jiao yi shu de mei xue,nian dai yu feng ge. Ci Bei Yu Zhi Hui = Wisdom and Compassion: the Sacred Art of Tibet: Cang Chuan Fo Jiao Yi Shu Da Zhan , [1]. Tai bei shi: Zhuan zhe, p. 36.

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Storytelling

Concepts

A vehicle for the preservation and transmission of knowledge. The Buddha’s teachings were originally passed down through oral transmission and storytelling, and stories of the Buddha’s past lives are considered an important source of inspiration and guidance.

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