Burning Still

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 Q2 Arts and Humanities
Akiko Walley
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Using an eighth-century copy of the 60-fascicle Flower Ornament Sutra as a case study, this article examines the transformation of a Buddhist scripture into an aesthetic object in early modern Japan. On the 14th day of the second month, 1667, a fire decimated Nigatsudo at Todaiji (Nara prefecture) along with most of the sacred objects within. Clerics salvaged partially burnt scrolls of an eighth-century Flower Ornament Sutra done in silver ink on indigo-dyed paper. The scrolls were restored ten years later, but by the first half of the eighteenth century, part of the set left the temple and began circulating in the art market as collectable calligraphy fragments, later known as the “Nigatsudo burnt sutra” (Nigatsudo yakegyo). This study traces the curious shift in the attribution of Nigatsudo yakegyo’s calligrapher that took place in the eighteenth century to consider how the burn marks impacted the transformation of this scripture from a devotional text into a collectable artefact. I argue that the curious switch in attribution occurred adhering to the popular imagination of the calligraphers, as well as the distinct role certain fragments played within the early-modern calligraphy collecting culture.
燃烧还
本文以八世纪的60卷《花饰经》为例,考察了近代早期日本佛教经典向审美对象的转变。1667年2月14日,东大寺奈良县新冢堂发生火灾,神社内大部分圣物被烧毁。神职人员抢救了一部用银墨在靛蓝纸上绘制的八世纪花饰经部分烧毁的卷轴。这些卷轴在十年后被修复,但到了18世纪上半叶,部分卷轴离开了寺庙,开始作为可收藏的书法碎片在艺术市场上流通,后来被称为“新冢堂烧经”(新冢堂yakegyo)。本研究追溯了十八世纪发生的新冢屋屋书法家归属的奇怪转变,以考虑焚烧痕迹如何影响这一经文从宗教文本转变为可收藏的人工制品。我认为,这种归属上的奇怪转变,既与书法家的普遍想象有关,也与某些碎片在早期现代书法收藏文化中所起的独特作用有关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
33.30%
发文量
11
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