On view
Asian Art
Huo Pavilion
Huo Pavilion
Buddhist votive stele,
750
Chinese
Tang dynasty, 618–907
y1943-134
Seated in the middle of the upper section of this stele is Shakyamuni Buddha, the original or historical Buddha. He is flanked by his disciples, the young Ananda on the left and the ancient Mahakashyapa on the right. They are surrounded by flying celestial beings, guardian figures, and others. At the bottom of the stele, an inscription states that members of a Buddhist lay society, who are depicted in rows above the inscription and identified by name, erected the monument. Through the good deed of commissioning the stele, the members would have acquired merit that aided their journeys toward enlightenment, the spiritual goal of Buddhism. The stele’s rectilinear shape was a result of its later repurposing as a building stone.
Information
Title
Buddhist votive stele
Dates
750
Medium
Stone
Dimensions
h. 73 cm., w. 49.5 cm., d. 13.5 cm. (28 3/4 x 19 1/2 x 5 5/16 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Carl Otto von Kienbusch Jr., Memorial Collection
Object Number
y1943-134
Place Made
Asia, China
Inscription
Inscription along bottom
Culture
Period
Type
Materials
Subject
Commissioned by the donor Li Jen-t’ai and his religious fraternity (I-i), likely from the area of the Ta Shan Ss? temple, north of Chi, Shantung or Shansi province, 750 CE; the back of the stele re-used for a new inscription, 1589 CE; [Yamanaka & Company, Inc.; sale, Collection of Chinese and Other Far Eastern Art assembled by Yamanaka & Company, Inc., under the supervision of the Alien Property Custodian of the United States of America, New York and Chicago, 1943, no. 405]; purchased by the Princeton University Art Museum for the Carl Otto von Kienbusch Jr. Memorial Collection, 1943.
- Wen Fong, "Buddha on Earth and in Heaven," Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 13, no. 2 (1954): 38–61., fig. 1, p. 53 (illus.); fig. 2, p. 54 (illus.)
- Cary Y. Liu, "Asian Art Collection: From Exotica to Art and History," in "An Art Museum for Princeton: The Early Years", special issue, Record of the Art Museum, Princeton University 55, no. 1/2 (1996): 125–134., p. 125, fig. 1