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Senboku: Mirror with Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara
Senboku: Mirror with Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara
 
Senboku: Mirror with Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara
Senboku: Mirror with Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara
 

Senboku: Mirror with Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara

JAPAN, Akita, Senboku; Heian period (794–1185); Commissioned by Fujiwara; Gilt bronze; Diameter: 14 cm; Suijinsha Shrine, Daisen, Akita, Japan
The mirror was discovered in Senboku in 1677, and it was listed as a National Treasure in 1953.
  The gilt bronze mirror is shaped like a lotus and measures 14 cm in diameter and 0.5 cm in thickness. In the center, there is an engraved image of a Thousand-Armed Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva with eleven heads. Forty arms stretch out from both sides of the Bodhisattva, holding objects such as a lotus, a vase, a staff, and a bow. The details of the figure are created using fine and delicate lines.
  There are eight Dharma protectors standing beside the Bodhisattva, and underneath there are Vasu and Mahadevi. Vasu, a thin old man with a straw rain cape, is in strong contrast with Mahadevi, who wears a resplendent robe. The back of the mirror features floral patterns and a butterfly. There is also an inscription which notes that the mirror was commissioned by a lady with the family name Fujiwara in memory of her deceased family.
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