Image for Preserving the Dharma  : Hozan Tankai and Japanese Buddhist art of the early modern era

Preserving the Dharma : Hozan Tankai and Japanese Buddhist art of the early modern era

Part of the Publications of the Tang Center for East Asian Art, Princeton University series
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In this beautifully illustrated book, eminent art historian John Rosenfield explores the life and art of the Japanese Buddhist monk Hozan Tankai (1629-1716).

Through a close examination of sculptures, paintings, ritual implements, and primary documents, the book demonstrates how the Shingon prelate's artistic activities were central to his important place in the world of late-seventeenth-century Japanese Buddhism.

At the same time, the book shows the richness of early modern Japanese Buddhist art, which has often been neglected and undervalued. Tankai was firmly committed to the spiritual disciplines of mountain Buddhism--seclusion, severe asceticism, meditation, and ritual.

But in the 1680s, after being appointed head of a small, run-down temple on the slopes of Mount Ikoma, near Nara, he revealed that he was also a gifted artist and administrator.

He embarked on an ambitious campaign of constructing temple halls and commissioning icons, and the Ikoma temple, soon renamed H?zanji, became a vibrant center of popular Buddhism, as it remains today.

He was a remarkably productive artist, and by the end of his life more than 150 works were associated with him. A major reconsideration of a key artistic and religious figure, Preserving the Dharma brings much-needed attention to an overlooked period of Japanese Buddhist art.

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Product Details
Princeton University Press
0691163979 / 9780691163970
Paperback / softback
709.2
01/03/2016
United States
English
160 pages : illustrations, maps
26 cm
Professional & Vocational/Tertiary Education (US: College) Learn More