被囚禁的女王

IF 0.2 1区 艺术学 0 ART
Anne N. Feng
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本文重新思考了风景的表现如何以及为什么成为唐代净土艺术日益重要的组成部分。我把重点放在7世纪的第209洞窟上,研究了敦煌的第一组山板,认为那些彩色景观代表了秃鹫峰,Śākyamuni佛陀的圣地。第209号洞窟展示了《禅经》的主人公魏德华夫人是如何成为中国艺术中第一位女性风景观察者的。从《禅经》出发,敦煌的画家们将曾被囚禁的皇室妃子、净土大师瓦伊德夫人(Lady vaideh)留在山脉中,在那里她与佛陀交谈。我认为vaideh女士与佛陀的相遇被映射到敦煌洞穴的空间上,使观众能够在面对秃鹫峰包围的Śākyamuni图标时假设她的位置。通过与vaideh的监禁斗争,画家们用风景来发展一种新的救赎空间意象。我坚持认为敦煌在景观表现方面的显著创新——这些成就被认为是对唐代后期“蓝绿”景观的预测——实际上是基于对七世纪早期佛教救赎论的可视化努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Imprisoned Queen
This paper reconsiders how and why the representation of landscape became an increasingly central component of Pure Land art in the Tang dynasty. Focusing on the seventh-century Cave 209, I examine the first set of mountain panels at Dunhuang, arguing that those polychrome landscapes represent Vulture Peak, the sacred abode of Śākyamuni Buddha. Cave 209 shows how Lady Vaidehī—the protagonist of the Meditation Sutra—emerges as the first female viewer of landscape in Chinese art. Departing from the Meditation Sutra, painters at Dunhuang resituate Lady Vaidehī, the formerly imprisoned royal consort and model Pure Land adept, within mountain ranges where she converses with the Buddha. I argue that Lady Vaidehī's encounter with the Buddha is mapped onto the space of a Dunhuang cave to enable the viewer to assume her position when facing the icon of Śākyamuni surrounded by Vulture Peak. By grappling with Vaidehī's imprisonment, painters use landscape to develop a new spatial imagery of salvation. I maintain that the striking innovations in landscape representation at Dunhuang—achievements that have been seen to anticipate later Tang “blue and green” landscapes—are in actuality based on an effort to visualize Buddhist soteriology in the early seventh century.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
20.00%
发文量
13
期刊介绍: Since its establishment in 1945, Archives of Asian Art has been devoted to publishing new scholarship on the art and architecture of South, Southeast, Central, and East Asia. Articles discuss premodern and contemporary visual arts, archaeology, architecture, and the history of collecting. To maintain a balanced representation of regions and types of art and to present a variety of scholarly perspectives, the editors encourage submissions in all areas of study related to Asian art and architecture. Every issue is fully illustrated (with color plates in the online version), and each fall issue includes an illustrated compendium of recent acquisitions of Asian art by leading museums and collections. Archives of Asian Art is a publication of Asia Society.
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